Interactive Transcript
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The following is a 65-year-old female who
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is getting an MRI for restaging purposes.
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So we'll start off by looking at
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the T2-weighted sequences and some
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of the T1 post-contrast sequences.
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And both on the T2-weighted sequence
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and the T1 FATSAT post-contrast sequence,
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performed in the arterial phase, we can see
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that the liver has a very nodular contour.
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So if I trace the liver border here and I
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go across it, very lumpy, bumpy, very nodular.
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And this is also seen, perhaps to a lesser
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degree on the arterial phase image here,
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but certainly there are findings of cirrhosis.
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And so this patient has cirrhosis and
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we've seen examples of what that looks
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like in the past few video vignettes.
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However, it is quite telling to see what this
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patient looked like a year prior to this exam.
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And if we were to do that, we can see that
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About a year ago, the patient did not quite
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have that nodular contour that we see.
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So that's something that's developed
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in about 12 months' time.
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Relatively smooth border.
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What we see within the inside of the
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liver are numerous liver lesions.
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We can see something over here, something over
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here, something over here, something over here.
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Many of them are quite small.
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On the T2-weighted sequences,
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they're relatively bright.
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On the T1 FATSAT post-contrast
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sequence, we see that they enhance.
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And so the added history in this patient is
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this patient has a history of breast cancer.
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Breast cancer with all these liver lesions
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turning out to be liver metastases.
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And over the course of treating these
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liver metastases, the patient has
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developed a cirrhotic liver morphology.
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And this is known as pseudocirrhosis.
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So this is an entity that has been
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classically been described in the setting
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of treated breast cancer mets to the liver.
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Now it's important to remember that we
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can see it with other primaries, so not
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just with breast, but classically it's
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been described with treated breast cancer.
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It's also been described in patients
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who've had a marked desmoplastic
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response to their metastatic disease
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who have not undergone treatment.
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So, classically we treat breast cancer, but
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also described in a few different settings,
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and these patients can also develop signs of
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portal hypertension, as has been discussed
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previously, including ascites, portal systemic
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collaterals, varices, splenomegaly, etc.
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