Interactive Transcript
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So this is a patient in his 70s,
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who presents with jaundice and an MRI
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was done to further evaluate this.
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So we'll start off with our axial T2-weighted
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images and coronal T2-weighted images.
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Lots of dilated bile ducts, right
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and left, very, very dilated.
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And so there's some abnormality that's
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resulting in obstruction of the bile ducts.
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We can scroll all the way downwards.
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Tough to see anything discrete.
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Certainly no choledocholithiasis
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or something benign like that.
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The other thing you notice is the
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pancreatic duct is quite dilated as well.
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And you can see that all the way
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here to the ampulla, right there.
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If we look at the common bile duct on the
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coronal images, we see that there is a relative
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abrupt cutoff of the common bile duct as well.
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It's quite dilated, and as you get distally, it
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just sort of gets abruptly smaller.
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Similarly with the pancreatic duct,
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it's quite dilated, and as you get
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out here, it just gets smaller.
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And so we've seen a few cases of, you know,
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certainly a lot of cases of strictures
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causing biliary ductal dilatation.
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When you see, you know, the bile duct dilated
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to this degree, it's not unreasonable to think
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that there could be a bile duct dilation.
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Distal common bile duct stricture from a
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malignancy such as a cholangiocarcinoma.
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And I think that may be
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something to think about.
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In this instance, there's also pancreatic
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ductal dilatation, which again,
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you may have soft tissue from the
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cholangiocarcinoma potentially extending
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into the pancreas causing ductal dilation.
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That's certainly a thought
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you could consider.
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Another possibility is that this
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is a lesion right at the ampulla
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causing what we call the double duct sign.
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So you can see that beautifully on the screen.
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3D MRCP image, this double duct sign
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of both the pancreatic and common bile
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ducts that are dilated, and that just
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tells you that there's a single lesion
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that's resulting in dilatation of both.
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And the reason I wanted to show this case is,
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you know, one may consider this potentially
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a cholangiocarcinoma causing pancreatic
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ductal dilatation, but this in fact turned
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out to be a primary pancreatic neoplasm that
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resulted in this sort of double duct sign.
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Tougher to see on the post-contrast sequences.
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I'll show you some of the pre- and post-contrast
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sequences where there's a bit of motion.
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So it's tough to see if
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there's anything right there.
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You can see the post-contrast sequence here.
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You know, maybe there's something very ill
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defined, but in this instance, I found that the
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diffusion-weighted imaging was quite useful.
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And oftentimes I can make most of the
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diagnoses that I need to make without using
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diffusion, but particularly when it comes
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to things in the pancreas, I found that
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diffusion-weighted imaging is often useful.
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So if we look at our ADC map over here, we can
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see that you have the pancreatic duct that's
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dilated, the biliary duct that's
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dilated, and right around here, a focal region of
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hypointense signal, right over here as well.
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If you look at DWI, you can see that.
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That area corresponds to
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an area of hyperintensity.
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So this turned out to be a pancreatic neoplasm.
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You may have also noticed numerous
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liver masses, which are the
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metastases of the pancreatic neoplasm.
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And so this turned out to be a
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pancreatic neoplasm resulting in dilatation
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of not only the pancreatic duct,
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but also of the common bile duct.
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So whenever you see biliary ductal
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dilatation, always look at adjacent
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organs, such as the pancreas, and look closely
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at the ampulla to make sure that there
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is no lesion located there that may be
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resulting in the biliary ductal obstruction.
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