Interactive Transcript
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So this patient came to us with a history
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of abdominal pain, 60-year-old female,
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and has a whole bunch of things going
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on, and it's quite an interesting case.
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So let's have a look at it.
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So actually, we're going to start
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off in this instance with a CT scan.
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This is done with intravenous contrast.
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And as we scroll through it, you know,
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we look at the liver and there's a
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whole bunch of probably what looks
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like liver cysts and some liver lesions
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that are too small to characterize.
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This large one over here looks like it has
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a little bit of a thick wall, maybe some
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minimal stranding within the adjacent fat
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and so presumably that is causing or at
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least contributing to the abdominal pain.
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It's certainly larger than the other
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cysts and has a little bit of signs that
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suggest that it may be infected potentially.
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And if that's all we see in this case,
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that's fine, but perhaps it's not sufficient.
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And there are a few other things going on.
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A lot of the other
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liver cysts are just distractors.
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So I want you to notice what's
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happening with the biliary tree here.
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Left hepatic lobe, dilated bile ducts.
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And notice that it's quite focal
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here, in that we don't see bile ducts
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that are dilated anywhere else in
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except really the left hepatic lobe.
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And specifically, if we're going to
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get into the anatomy, it's really the
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lateral segment of the left hepatic lobe.
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So very, very focal and specific
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regions of ductal dilatation.
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And again, if that's the observation we
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make, that would be a great observation,
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but again, not sufficient because the other
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observation that's subtle and that we'll
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see a little bit more on the next study
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that we look at in this patient is the
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fact that inside these bile ducts, there
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are hyperdense foci, one over here, one
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over here, one over here, one over here.
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So the bile ducts themselves are relatively
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hypodense, but inside of them, they have
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fill-in defects that are hyperdense.
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And the more you look, the more you see it.
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Again, some more fill-in defects here.
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Let's look at these findings on the
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coronal before we get to an MR image.
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You can see the bile duct, the left hepatic
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lobe is dilated, but look how there are these
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fill-in defects that are relatively hyperdense,
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filling some of these dilated bile ducts.
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You can see them very nicely here.
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Another one over here, this fill-in
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defect with a dilated biliary tree.
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And again, I want you to notice that
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it's affecting really the lateral
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segment of the left hepatic lobe.
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All right.
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This is followed by an MR.
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So let's have a look at these
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findings on the MRI images.
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We did this without contrast.
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This is just a very short study with a few
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sequences to evaluate what was happening here.
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T2-weighted axial image.
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We can see a bunch of these cysts.
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We're just going to ignore that for the moment.
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I want us to focus on the bile ducts.
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Let's see.
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This is what we see over here.
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Lateral segment bile ducts dilated.
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Look what's inside these bile ducts, these
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geographic T2 hypointense filling defects.
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There's a whole bunch of them in the
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intrahepatic biliary tree over here as well.
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You can also see that large cyst over
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here as a side with a little bit of debris
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within it; looks a little bit thick-walled.
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And so the idea that this is infected
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or inflamed, I think, is very reasonable.
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Why is the left bile duct dilated?
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What do these filling defects represent?
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You can see it on the coronal image.
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As well, similar findings of dilated biliary tree
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with a bunch of filling defects inside of it.
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And I'm going to finish off sort of
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describing these findings by having
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you look at the T1-weighted images.
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This is the T1 out-of-phase
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image performed without FATSAT.
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And just to notice that these filling
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defects are actually T1 hyperintense.
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And on the in-phase, T1 in-phase
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images, they remain hyperintense.
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All right, so T2 hypointense filling defects,
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which are T1 hyperintense within dilated
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bile ducts involving the left hepatic lobe.
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These findings are quite pathognomonic,
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and at least the entity that should
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come to your mind when you see this
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is current pyogenic cholangitis.
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We don't see this a lot in our patient
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population and it most commonly occurs
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in patients of Southeast Asian descent,
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of which this patient actually was.
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And what you end up seeing are areas of
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ductal dilatation with intraductal calculi.
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That's what these filling defects represent.
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We often see them in the intrahepatic ducts.
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You can also see them in the extrahepatic ducts.
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But for whatever reason, there tends to
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be a predilection for these dilated ducts
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to occur in the left lateral segment.
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So if you see that left lateral segment
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ducts dilated containing stones, and a person
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of Southeast Asian descent, you’ve got to
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think of recurrent pyogenic cholangitis.
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Less commonly,
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you can also see it affecting the right
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posterior segment, somewhere
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in this distribution over here.
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Often the stones that you see with these
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patients are pigmented stones, which are
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T2 hypointense but also T1 hyperintense.
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And so that's what we're seeing over here,
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these T1 hyperintense pigmented stones.
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Why does this entity occur?
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It's thought to be due to an infection
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with parasites such as Clonorchis or Ascaris,
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or potentially even a bacterial infection.
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That results in cholangitis or
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inflammation of the bile ducts.
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Over time, that inflammation results in strictures,
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and those strictures result in stasis of bile.
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It's unable to escape and empty out properly.
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And anytime you have stasis of bile,
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you're predisposed to forming stones,
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which is what happened in
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this instance with these patients.
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So one of the complications associated
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with this is liver abscesses, and so it's
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hard to know if this itself was a liver
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abscess or if this was the large cyst that
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got super infected due to this overall
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inflammatory process.
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We really don't have prior imaging on
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this patient, but nevertheless, presumably
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this was causing the patient's symptoms.
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And this is something that the patient
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had for quite a bit of time that
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was the result of that inflammation.
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So this is again a nice case of
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recurrent pyogenic cholangitis.
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