Interactive Transcript
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So this patient's 55 years old,
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female with bacteremia and sepsis,
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and they're looking for etiology.
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They got a CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis.
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And so I'll start off by just showing you this.
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As we look at these, I want
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you to focus on the biliary tree.
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And one of the things that we can notice
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is that it sort of looks like the bile
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ducts are dilated, that you're seeing them.
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You're seeing a lot of them, both the right and
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left hepatic ducts, right over here,
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this hypodense stuff, and they look quite dilated.
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And I think if that was the initial
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interpretation, that's not unreasonable.
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If you look at it a little bit more
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closely, it is a little bit unusual
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for these to be bile ducts, in the sense
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that typically bile ducts are not present
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on both sides of the portal vein.
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They're usually just on one side of the
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portal vein, whereas this abnormality
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that we're seeing is actually sort of
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surrounding both sides of the portal vein.
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So that should clue you in that maybe
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this is something else going on.
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And if you were to look at it very
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closely, and I submit to you that it's
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tougher to look at it on the CT scans.
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It almost looks like these aren't discrete
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tubular bile ducts, but rather whatever
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this is, is made up of multiple sort of
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round spaces, like one thing over here
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and potentially one thing over here and
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potentially one thing over here that are
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just sort of clustered together, giving the
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appearance of sort of a tubular structure.
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Nevertheless, you know, I think it's tough
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to sort of evaluate this finding just on CT
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imaging, and so we'll look at this on MR,
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and so the patient's T2-weighted image, and we can
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see that, again, there is this T2 hyper
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intense structure is present within the liver.
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That observation that we had made on the CT
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scan, I think is better seen on this image.
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That's the portal vein over here.
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And we can see that this abnormality is
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present on both sides of the portal vein.
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And if you were to look at it very
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critically, you'll notice that much of this
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abnormality is composed of very discrete
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cystic spaces that are almost clustered
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up against each other rather than,
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you know, a tubular structure in and of itself.
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And so, when you see these findings,
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one of the things you have to think about
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is this entity of peribiliary cysts.
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And peribiliary cysts are a dilatation
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of glands within the periductal tissue
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of the bile ducts, but they don't have a
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communication to the biliary tree itself.
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In fact, if you look at this image,
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you can see the right hepatic duct,
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the anterior branch and the posterior branch
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look relatively normal, and that this
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abnormality here is sort of separate from it.
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Now this is an uncommon entity,
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but when we do see it, we often see it in
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the setting of chronic liver disease,
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and they can increase over time with
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progression of patients who have cirrhosis.
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And the reason I wanted to show it is
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because it's a finding that at least on CT
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imaging and sometimes on MR specifically
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if you're not aware of the entity,
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it can look like biliary ductal obstruction.
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Having them in and of itself
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is of no clinical importance.
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And what you're really looking for is
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clusters of cysts that are hugging the
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portal veins that are on both sides of the
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portal veins and they tend to be concentrated
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sort of along the center of the liver.
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And with very little that is evident
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along the periphery of the liver.
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So when you see these sorts of findings,
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particularly in patients who have
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cirrhosis or chronic liver disease,
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you've got to think of peribiliary cysts.
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