Interactive Transcript
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So this patient is a six-year-old male.
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History is chronic pain, and they've gotten
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an MRI to evaluate the potential etiology.
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So I'm going to start off with the axial and
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coronal T2-weighted images to get a lay of
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the land and see what we're dealing with here.
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As you scroll downwards, I'm going to
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focus on the bile ducts, and we can see
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that the intrahepatic ducts are dilated.
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Small dilated ducts here, larger dilated
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ducts in the left hepatic lobe, but as they
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sort of come together, we can see that there
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are multifocal regions of ductal dilatation.
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You can see the extrahepatic biliary
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tree here as you go downwards.
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You can sort of see it here,
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sandwiched in between other structures.
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Generally more difficult to see and probably
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a relatively normal caliber, more distally.
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I think the most pronounced areas are
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sort of the right hepatic ducts and the
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left hepatic ducts that look dilated.
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On the coronal T2-weighted images,
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same findings, we can see the
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intrahepatic ducts are quite dilated.
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The common hepatic duct looks
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relatively normal in caliber.
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And as you go downwards, the common bile duct
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looks relatively normal in caliber, but it's
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surrounded by a bunch of these structures, which
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we're going to focus on in a couple of minutes.
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This is the MRCP sequence.
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Again, mildly dilated intrahepatic
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ducts, extrahepatic biliary tree,
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relatively normal in caliber.
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But as a side, I just want you to
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notice that the borders of it look
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sort of wavy in their appearance.
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They don't quite look straight
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as we've seen it before.
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They almost have an undulated appearance.
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Let's look at some post-contrast sequences.
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This is an axial T1-weighted image with
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fat saturation done with intravenous
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contrast in the portal venous phase.
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And we can see that the bile ducts are dilated.
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Normally, you really shouldn't be
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able to see any of these bile ducts.
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They're definitely dilated.
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Very evident in the left hepatic lobes
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as well as the right hepatic lobes as
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you're getting towards the porta hepatis.
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And as you go downwards, you can see that the
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biliary caliber is probably relatively normal.
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But what you're starting to really see in
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here that's abnormal is surrounding these
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bile ducts are numerous vessels, right?
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They are covering them, completely
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encircling them over here.
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And going all the way down, they're
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completely surrounding these bile ducts.
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And, you know, as we sort of go through this,
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uh, systematically, at some point, you're going
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to want to look at the portal veins in these
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patients to make sure they're patent.
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And it's really tough to see
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the main portal vein over here.
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And in fact, this main portal vein
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has been thrombosed in the past.
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And all these vessels that you're seeing
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are collateral vessels as a result of that.
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And this appearance is known as cavernous
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transformation of the portal vein.
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Now that in and of itself
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is not that big a deal.
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We do see it from time to time.
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But what's sort of unusual in this case is the
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fact that these vessels are enveloping the bile
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ducts so dramatically that the biliary tree
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is in fact dilated due to some degree of mass
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effect from these dilated collateral vessels.
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And so that entity is
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called portal biliopathy.
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And it's quite uncommon, but it's something
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to just think about whenever you see
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cavernous transformation of the portal veins.
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Are they having some sort of
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effect upon the bile ducts?
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And so essentially it's a biliary
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obstruction due to cavernous
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transformation of the portal veins.
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And one of the appearances that
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has been described on MRCP is a
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wavy appearance of the bile ducts.
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And I sort of like this case because, you know,
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if you look at this bile duct over here, you
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almost get the sense of that wavy appearance.
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And, you know, I sort of refer to it as
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the sort of undulated borders, but
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that's the same sort of appearance.
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It's just the vessels that are causing
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mass effect that are resulting in that
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wavy appearance that we can see over here.
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We can see that a little bit
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on the coronal MRCP images.
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These are some of the vessels here
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that are causing mass effect.
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And I think very nicely on our T2 coronal
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weighted images, where you can see much
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of these vessels that are really,
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you know, causing some degree of mass
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effect upon the bile duct, the extrahepatic
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biliary tree, resulting in upstream ductal
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dilatation of the intrahepatic bile ducts.
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