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Training Collections
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Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
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Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
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Musculoskeletal Imaging
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Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
1 topic, 5 min.
4 topics, 10 min.
4 topics, 15 min.
11 topics, 31 min.
Endometriosis – Introduction
6 m.Evaluating Endometriosis
3 m.Pattern 1 – Ovarian Endometrioma
3 m.Pattern 2 – Superficial Peritoneal Disease
1 m.Pattern 2 – Kissing Ovaries – Case
6 m.Pattern 2 – Filmy Adhesions & Candle Wax Phenomenon
3 m.Pattern 3 – Deep/Solid Infiltrating Type
4 m.Pattern 3 – Torus Uterinus
2 m.Pattern 3 – Rectosigmoid Involvement
1 m.Pattern 3 – Rectosigmoid Involvement – Case
4 m.Three Step Interpretation – Endometriosis
4 m.11 topics, 38 min.
Complex Ovarian “Masses” – Overview
2 m.Teratoma
4 m.Teratoma – Case
4 m.Ovarian Torsion
3 m.Peritoneal Inclusion Cysts Overview with Case
8 m.Ovarian Tumors on MRI
5 m.Ovarian Tumor – Case
3 m.Mucinous Cystadenoma & Epithelial Ovarian Malignancy
3 m.Ovarian Malignancy – Unspecified – Case
5 m.Krukenberg Tumors – Case
6 m.Ovarian Masses – Summary
2 m.0:01
All right, so now we'll change
0:02
gears a little bit and we'll talk
0:03
about more complex ovarian masses.
0:07
And you'll notice here that I have mass
0:09
again in quote because we use that
0:11
term for a wide variety of different
0:14
pathologies, but let's just zoom out a
0:17
little bit and talk about what a mass is.
0:19
It's actually a space-occupying
0:21
region with its own volume.
0:24
So, I always tell my residents and
0:26
fellows to be very careful using the word
0:28
mass because even though that's technically
0:31
correct, it's really just a lesion that
0:33
occupies space, it has a negative connotation.
0:37
When people read the word mass in their
0:38
report, they automatically think cancer.
0:41
So we need to remember that masses can be
0:43
neoplastic or non-neoplastic, and that can
0:46
range from a benign tumor to a malignant tumor.
0:49
A mass can also be due to
0:51
hemorrhage or an endometrioma.
0:53
It can be due to a cyst.
0:55
It could be due to post-surgical or inflammatory
0:58
conditions caused by adhesions as well.
1:02
So, wide spectrum of abnormalities
1:04
that can cause masses.
1:06
And we'll just take it slow.
1:07
We'll start from benign and move our way over
1:09
to the more sinister and malignant lesions.
1:12
So in terms of MRI, there are certain ovarian
1:15
masses which do have unique MRI features.
1:18
So those include mature and immature teratomas,
1:22
endometriomas, which we talked about,
1:24
and then fibrous lesions, which have low T2
1:27
signal, including fibroma, fibrothecoma,
1:30
cystadenofibroma, and Brenner tumor.
1:33
So we'll talk about, in general,
1:35
we'll go over these categories of
1:38
lesions and their MRI features.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
All right, so now we'll change
0:02
gears a little bit and we'll talk
0:03
about more complex ovarian masses.
0:07
And you'll notice here that I have mass
0:09
again in quote because we use that
0:11
term for a wide variety of different
0:14
pathologies, but let's just zoom out a
0:17
little bit and talk about what a mass is.
0:19
It's actually a space-occupying
0:21
region with its own volume.
0:24
So, I always tell my residents and
0:26
fellows to be very careful using the word
0:28
mass because even though that's technically
0:31
correct, it's really just a lesion that
0:33
occupies space, it has a negative connotation.
0:37
When people read the word mass in their
0:38
report, they automatically think cancer.
0:41
So we need to remember that masses can be
0:43
neoplastic or non-neoplastic, and that can
0:46
range from a benign tumor to a malignant tumor.
0:49
A mass can also be due to
0:51
hemorrhage or an endometrioma.
0:53
It can be due to a cyst.
0:55
It could be due to post-surgical or inflammatory
0:58
conditions caused by adhesions as well.
1:02
So, wide spectrum of abnormalities
1:04
that can cause masses.
1:06
And we'll just take it slow.
1:07
We'll start from benign and move our way over
1:09
to the more sinister and malignant lesions.
1:12
So in terms of MRI, there are certain ovarian
1:15
masses which do have unique MRI features.
1:18
So those include mature and immature teratomas,
1:22
endometriomas, which we talked about,
1:24
and then fibrous lesions, which have low T2
1:27
signal, including fibroma, fibrothecoma,
1:30
cystadenofibroma, and Brenner tumor.
1:33
So we'll talk about, in general,
1:35
we'll go over these categories of
1:38
lesions and their MRI features.
Report
Faculty
Zahra Kassam, MD, FRCPC
Associate Professor of Medical Imaging, Division Head of Body Imaging
Western University
Tags
Ultrasound
Ovaries
Neoplastic
MRI
Gynecologic (GYN)
CT
Body
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