Interactive Transcript
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In patients with suspected placenta percreta,
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it's particularly important
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to try to identify any structures
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that may be invaded by the placenta.
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One of the most frequently invaded
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structures is the bladder dome.
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When evaluating the bladder dome,
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it's important to evaluate the signal
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of the bladder wall in its entirety.
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So you can trace the signal of the bladder
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wall, which should appear T2 hypointense.
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Bladder dome invasion may be difficult to detect
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because it often appears as a signal abnormality
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on only a single slice of the images.
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This may look like focal disruption
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of the normal detrusor signal.
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You can also see blurring or irregularity
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of the bladder wall or the bladder mucosa.
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As is the case in this patient with a low
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lying placenta and placenta percreta, we see
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focal disruption of the bladder wall signal.
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With a small amount of focal protrusion of
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placental signal into the bladder lumen.
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In patients who have close approximation of
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the bladder by the placenta, but not frank
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invasion of the bladder dome, you may also see
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prominent vessels in the supravesicular fat
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pad, which will appear as T2 dark flow voids.
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Identifying bladder dome invasion
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is also particularly important.
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Because at the time of delivery, if bladder dome
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invasion is suspected, the surgeons will have
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to make a cystotomy, or opening in the bladder
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dome, and then repair it, which may require
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involvement of urology at the time of surgery.
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Another key feature that should be evaluated
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in patients with suspected placenta
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percreta is involvement of the parametrium
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and recruitment of the uterine vessels.
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The parametrium is a fibrous band of
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tissue that separates the supravaginal
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cervix from the urinary bladder.
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You will not see the parametrium in a pregnant
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patient because of all of the vascularity
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that normally proliferates in the pelvis.
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The parametrium extends between
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the broad ligaments, and the uterine
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arteries run within the parametrium.
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So in patients who have placenta percreta, as
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is the case here, if you see recruitment of
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the uterine arteries by the aberrant placenta,
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you can imply that the parametrium is involved.
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So in this patient, we're at the level of the
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urinary bladder on this T2-weighted axial image.
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We can see a placental tissue mass in the lower
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uterine segment near the internal cervical os.
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The uterine arteries are branches off of the
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anterior division of the internal iliac artery.
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And we can see in this patient T2
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dark vessels, which are extending
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directly from the region of the uterine
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arteries toward the abnormal placenta.
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Identifying parametrial involvement and uterine
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vascular recruitment is important because
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it may necessitate radical hysterectomy.
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If branches of the uterine arteries are
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involved, the surgeon will have to take
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a broader, more lateral vascular pedicle
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rather than a traditional hysterectomy.
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