Interactive Transcript
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So this patient is a 60-year-old male
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with hepatitis C and cirrhosis,
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who had an indeterminate liver lesion
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found on a different study and an MRI
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was requested to evaluate it.
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So here we have our post-contrast images, and
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the lesion in question, we can see over here.
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So on the T1 FATSAT post-contrast,
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this is arterial, portal venous.
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And equilibrium phase images, the lesion is
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sort of bordering segment 4A and segment 8.
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But it demonstrates certainly non-
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rim arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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So, you know, if we imagine the lesion
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like this, it's not the whole lesion that's
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enhancing, but I would say about 75 percent
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of it is enhancing on the inside of it.
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And so that qualifies as non-rim
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arterial phase hyperenhancement.
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When you look at the size, this is going to be
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about 20 millimeters, so we're just going to
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say it's at or equal to 20 millimeters in size.
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When we look at the portal venous
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phase, unequivocal non-peripheral
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washout, a non-peripheral washout.
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And all that means is that the inside of it
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is darker than the adjacent liver parenchyma.
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And when you actually look at both the
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portal venous and perhaps better seen
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on the equilibrium phase images,
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is that little rim that's surrounding this.
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So this has a pseudocapsule.
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Putting all this together, this
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easily qualifies as a LI-RADS 5 lesion.
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Now this particular lesion has one
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other imaging feature, which is
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why I wanted to show this case.
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If we look at the T1-weighted images performed
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in this case, out of phase, and this one in
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phase, we can again see the lesion over here.
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It's bordering segments 4A and segment 8.
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On the in-phase images, it looks like,
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like this, maybe a little bit hyper-
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intense compared to the liver parenchyma.
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On the out-of-phase images, it is
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hypo-intense, the signal drops.
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And when that signal drops, that tells us
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that this lesion contains fat, contains lipid.
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Now, LI-RADS 5 lesion irrespective of the
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fact that it contains lipid or not.
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The fact that it contains lipid
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adds a lot more specificity.
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Um, to what this is going to be,
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which is a hepatocellular carcinoma.
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Lipid-containing lesions in the liver are not
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common, and the two ones that we end up seeing
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that are most common are probably hepatocellular
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carcinoma, which is a malignant mass, and
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liver adenomas, which are benign masses.
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Now we've discussed adenomas
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in the benign liver mass talk.
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We're sort of talking about HCCs in this talk.
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Very simply put, if you have
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a fat-containing lesion in anybody who
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has an increased risk of developing
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HCC, so they have cirrhosis, they have
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a history of chronic hepatitis B, etc.,
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well, we're going to worry that that
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reflects an HCC until proven otherwise.
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Adenomas typically won't occur in patients
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who have risk factors for cirrhosis.
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This is typically young females who
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are on oral contraceptive pills.
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It could be males or females
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who are on steroids as well.
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These are patients who have
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glycogen storage diseases.
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So these are the patients
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who will end up getting adenomas.
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But anybody who is at risk for HCC and has a
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fat-containing lesion, well, you don't have
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to be worried that that fat-containing lesion
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in fact reflects an HCC and not an adenoma.
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