Interactive Transcript
0:02
Hello and welcome to Noon Conferences hosted by MRI Online. In response
0:06
to the changes happening around the world right now and the shutting down
0:09
of in person events, we have decided to provide free daily Noon Conferences
0:13
to all radiologists worldwide. Today, we are excited to welcome back Dr.
0:17
Mahan Mathur. He is an Associate Professor of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging
0:21
at Yale School of Medicine, Associate Program Director for Diagnostic Radiology
0:26
Residency, and Director of Medical Student Education in Radiology. He has
0:30
been awarded the Yale Radiology Teacher of the Year four times.
0:33
A reminder that there will be time at the end of this hour
0:36
for a Q&A session. Please use the Q&A feature to ask all questions
0:40
and we will get to as many as we can before our time
0:42
is up. That being said, thank you so much for joining us again
0:45
today, Dr. Mathur. I will let you take it from here.
0:48
Thank you very much. Thank you for the invitation. It's a huge honor
0:52
to be here and a real privilege to be able to speak to
0:55
everyone again. So I'm going to share my screen.
1:02
We have lots of people logged in and we are ready to go.
1:05
So as mentioned, my name is Mahan Mathur. I'm a radiologist at Yale.
1:09
You can read my credentials over here. And today we're going to talk
1:12
about imaging of benign liver masses. All right. So we're going to cover
1:17
a whole bunch of lesions in the liver, all of which are benign.
1:21
It doesn't mean you don't need to worry about them necessarily,
1:24
but certainly some of them you don't need to worry about.
1:26
And we'll go through them over the course of this next hour or so.
1:30
So we'll start off with some unknown cases. And I'm going to ask
1:33
the audience to help me out with some of these.
1:37
Here's your first unknown case. I'm not going to provide much history for
1:42
many of these cases. Feel free to type in your answers.
1:45
Let me see what you guys are thinking. It's a T2 weighted image, T1 post
1:48
contrast subtracted image. We've got some answers starting to come up over
1:57
here. I'm going to wait for some people to think about it,
2:00
let it marinate a little bit, see if we can come up with
2:03
some good answers. All right. A lot of people coming up with some
2:06
nice answers here. Okay. All right. And all sort of along the same
2:12
lines for the most part, so I like it.
2:15
So let's move on to our second case and we'll come back to
2:17
it in a little bit. How about this case over here?
2:24
So case number two, showing a T2 weighted image in a T1 post
2:28
contrast image, a solitary lesion in this liver. It looks simple enough,
2:37
but is there a twist over here? Is there a trick over here?
2:40
Simple cyst, simple cyst, some good debris. Everyone who's saying it's a
2:46
simple cyst, some good debris, I could not fault you
2:49
for saying that. Certainly. This is sort of
2:52
an annoying case in that sense, but there have been a few people
2:55
who've given me the specific right answer and we'll go and get back
2:59
to it during the course of this talk. And we'll talk a little
3:02
bit about why this entity is something you should talk about when you
3:06
see this specific type of lesion. All right. Case number three,
3:09
I'm showing you a T2 weighted image from 2013
3:14
as a line for this patient and then 2018 T2 weighted image post
3:18
contrast sequences are portal lesions in equilibrium phase in 2019. Help
3:24
me out and let's figure out what's going on with this patient.
3:27
What's the best diagnosis here? Some answers here. All right. So a couple
3:33
of answers, some on the right lines. We'll get back to this case
3:35
in a little bit. I got a couple more cases to share with
3:37
you. A lot of images to see over here. I'm just going to go
3:39
through them as you type in your answers. T2 weighted image.
3:43
This is T1 in phase. T1 out of phase. And then dynamic post
3:47
contrast sequences, arterial, portal venous, equilibrium phase. There's
3:52
a lesion in this liver. What are we going to call it?
3:55
Oh, everyone has the right answer here, I think. All right. Good.
4:02
So there was a terrific talk earlier this week with MRI online that
4:05
went through what this entity is. I highly suggest you listen to that.
4:08
Really a great talk. And so we'll touch base on some of those
4:11
points here today as well as a lot more answers could. So everyone
4:14
along the same lines over here. Now help me out with this one.
4:18
Case number five, one of our last cases I'm going to show you.
4:21
Unknown cases. T2 fat sat, T1 in out of phase, and then your
4:25
dynamic post contrast images. Lesion in the liver. What do we think the
4:28
right answer is over here? Imagine we're at the workstation seeing this
4:33
case. We need to provide one diagnosis for this patient. What's the best
4:36
diagnosis? All right. So people are starting to come up with some answers.
4:43
And some people coming up with answers that... I can't really...
4:47
I'm not giving you much history here. So I'll say the right line.
4:50
Some people coming up with other answers. Yeah, but it's a tough one.
4:55
This one is all over the place, which is great. Hopefully we can,
4:58
at the end of the talk, come to a better, a more unified
5:03
conclusion. Okay. I think, penultimate case. I'm showing you a CT scan.
5:09
This was done for a patient with lung cancer. They saw the lung... It
5:12
was a chest CT, they saw the lung faces, bunch of liver lesions.
5:15
Wanted to get an MR. I'm showing you just a few sequences from
5:17
the MRT1 in phase, out of phase, and post contrast, I believe in
5:21
the portal venous phase. So what are these lesions?
5:25
You have to decide whether they're metastases or not. That was the clinical
5:28
concern. If they're not metastases, then can we give a specific diagnosis
5:32
to what they are? All right. So someone, some people think it could
5:36
be metastasis. Got some corollaries disease, some METs. Some people think
5:41
it may be some fatty liver histoplasmosis. There was a talk on,
5:44
I think, CT histoplasmosis earlier this week in the lung, which is a
5:48
great talk as well. So again, some people I think are on the
5:52
right line. Some people, a few different answers. Let's talk a little bit
5:55
towards the end about what the right answer is for this.
5:58
And let's just read a few more answers before we move on.
6:00
Okay. And this is our last case, unknown case.
6:05
T2 weighted image, lesion in the liver. What is the diagnosis?
6:09
All right. Everybody has got this one. Very good. Now, I'll ask you
6:14
one more question because I did anticipate everyone may get the right answer
6:18
here. So you all are correct. What is the correct WHO classification of
6:23
this lesion? I'll tell you, this is something I didn't really know about
6:29
until relatively recently, but I had to learn about it. We had a
6:31
case and our providers wanted to know, and so I had to look
6:34
it up. And so we all know what it is. What's the WHO
6:38
classification? All right. Who knows? Very good. And some people are coming
6:43
up with some numbers. So I like that. So I think some people
6:47
are really on top of it. Very good. So some people are really
6:50
coming on top of it. So we'll reach back to this right towards
6:52
the end. So what are our objectives for this talk? We're talking about
6:56
benign liver lesions. These are a whole host of entities we're going to
6:59
talk about.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.