Interactive Transcript
0:01
So the following, um, patient is 62 years old,
0:04
a female patient with a history of hepatitis C,
0:07
has elevated liver function tests and an
0:11
MR was done to evaluate the etiology of this.
0:14
So here are the MR images from this exam,
0:17
and I'm going to actually start off with
0:18
the T2-weighted sequences in this study,
0:21
and I'm going to focus right about here.
0:24
So what do we see on this image?
0:25
So this is a T2-weighted image
0:27
with fat saturation.
0:30
Lots of heterogeneity in this liver.
0:32
If you see, you know, most of the right
0:34
hepatic lobe is sort of replaced with this
0:37
heterogeneous sort of increased T2 signal.
0:41
I'm talking about all this stuff over here,
0:43
all this stuff over here, and the way to
0:45
kind of tell that it's abnormal is just you
0:48
sort of compare it to signal in the liver
0:49
over here, which is relatively darker.
0:52
And if you look at this.
0:53
This is quite a bit brighter.
0:55
In the midst of all this, you have what
0:56
looks like a dominant lesion in the right
1:00
hepatic lobe with rounded borders, so we'll
1:02
evaluate that in the post-contrast images.
1:05
And the other thing you see when you
1:06
kind of scroll up and down through this
1:08
is that you don't really see the normal
1:09
flow voids that you expect to see in
1:13
portal veins that contain flowing blood.
1:15
So on T2-weighted images, when you have
1:17
flowing blood such as you see in the aorta
1:19
over here or the IVC that looks slit-like, but
1:21
it's certainly patent in this, in this cut.
1:24
Flowing blood will have dark signal,
1:25
just like this, hypo-intense signal.
1:27
So should the portal vein, but
1:29
you don't see the portal vein.
1:30
In fact, you see the outline of what could
1:32
reflect the portal vein over here, but it's
1:35
filled with that very heterogeneous signal that
1:37
is almost contiguous with that heterogeneous
1:39
signal that you see in the right hepatic lobe.
1:42
And again, just compare it to the left hepatic
1:44
lobe, where the signal is relatively normal.
1:46
So let's look and see what this looks
1:48
like on the post-contrast images.
1:50
So here we have the post-contrast images
1:52
in our patient, uh, T1, FATSAT, post
1:55
contrast, arterial phase, portal venous
1:57
phase, equilibrium phase over here.
2:01
And I'll, uh, first focus on that
2:03
dominant mass in the right hepatic lobe.
2:05
We can see it over here.
2:07
Quite heterogeneous, but definitely demonstrates
2:10
non-RIM arterial phase hyperenhancement.
2:14
Right, the inside of it.
2:15
Not necessarily all of it, but the
2:17
majority of it over here and over here
2:19
and over here demonstrates enhancement.
2:21
It's a very large lesion.
2:23
It's certainly well above that
2:24
threshold of 20 millimeters.
2:26
When we look at the portal venous
2:27
phases, the same areas that demonstrated
2:29
arterial phase hyperenhancement become
2:32
darker than the liver parenchyma.
2:34
So there is definite washout.
2:36
And there's a very, very thin
2:38
capsule that surrounds this lesion.
2:40
So a capsule is also present.
2:42
So this easily qualifies as a LI-RADS 5 lesion.
2:47
But in addition to these findings, I
2:49
want to focus back on that finding that
2:51
we saw in the T2-weighted images of lack
2:54
of that flow void in the portal vein.
2:56
So that tells us that there's something inside
2:58
the portal vein that's obstructing flow.
3:00
If we look at the post-contrast images,
3:02
this is the outline of the left portal vein.
3:04
Look at the signal inside of it.
3:06
It looks so similar to the
3:08
signal of this tumor over here.
3:10
Both arterial hyperenhancement
3:12
and washout associated with it.
3:14
So this finding is
3:15
characteristic of tumor thrombus.
3:19
So if we were to look at this patient and
3:21
identify that this reflects tumor thrombus,
3:24
this straight away qualifies this patient
3:27
with a LI-RADS tumor in vein category.
3:33
TIV, that we alluded to in the
3:35
introduction to the LI-RADS lexicon.
3:38
Now, as I said, patients without LI-RADS
3:40
tumor in vein findings usually have a lesion
3:44
associated with it in the liver, and that
3:45
lesion doesn't always meet imaging criteria
3:47
for HCC, so it may warrant a biopsy.
3:50
In this instance, this lesion actually does
3:53
meet criteria for hepatocellular carcinoma,
3:55
so it probably wouldn't need a biopsy.
3:56
And if we were to, Sort of put
3:57
this all together, it would be a
3:58
large HCC, which is associated with
4:01
tumor thrombus in the portal vein.
4:03
It would still, though, qualify as a
4:04
LI-RADS tumor and vein thrombus category.
4:08
And another finding in this patient, which
4:10
is nice to see because it differentiates
4:12
tumor thrombus from bland thrombus,
4:14
is the finding of bland thrombus.
4:15
So let's see what that looks like.
4:17
And we'll focus sort of on the main portal vein
4:20
as it enters the portomesenteric confluence
4:23
Normally, this should enhance with contrast,
4:25
but here, we don't see that enhancement.
4:27
In fact, we see a filling defect
4:29
that is occupying that portal vein.
4:32
So this, in fact, represents thrombus as well.
4:35
But notice that the inside of it looks so dark,
4:38
it looks so dark, you know, when you compare
4:41
it to that tumor thrombus that you saw, that
4:43
actually had somewhat gray signal within this.
4:46
So when you see this sort of dark
4:47
signal within the portal vein, this
4:50
is going to reflect bland thrombus.
4:53
When you see signal within the portal vein
4:56
that looks grayer in signal, such as over
4:58
here, this is going to reflect tumor thrombus.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.