Interactive Transcript
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Okay, so teratoma, this is a very interesting
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tumour that is actually quite common.
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It's a type of germ cell tumour which is composed
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of mesodermal, endodermal, and ectodermal
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tissues, and it does have very unique imaging
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features on MRI and on CT as well, but MRI has a
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few more features, and that is characterized by
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the presence of intratumoral fat or lipid, and
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we might see a fat-fluid or a fat-fatty level.
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So we will go through that in a little
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bit more detail in just a moment.
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So on CT, this is one of my most interesting
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teratoma cases from several years ago.
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This is a 38-year-old woman.
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And she has bilateral teratomas.
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So you can see the right ovary is huge.
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And then we've got fat within this lesion.
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And we've got a similar-looking
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lesion on the left side.
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And I don't know, when I looked at this case
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initially, I thought maybe these look like
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little brains with the ventricles developing.
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So it was a very unusual appearance.
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But as you looked a little bit more
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superiorly, there was fluids in the
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perisplenic space and the splenocolic ligament.
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And then as we progressed more superiorly
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from the right ovarian mass, the wall
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looked a little bit more thick and,
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um, maybe some solid components in it.
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So this is a more sinister-looking mass.
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So maybe that right ovary was teratous,
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or maybe there was malignant
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degeneration of one of those lesions.
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So those are important things
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to keep in mind as well.
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On MRI, again, the technique is quite important.
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We want to make sure that we include
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T1-weighted images with and without
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fat saturation, because obviously we're
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looking at the signal characteristics
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and the composition of the lesion.
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So if there is fat within the
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lesion, we know that this is a teratoma.
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A neat clue that not many people use
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is one that's created by an artifact.
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So because the teratoma contains both
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fluid and fat content, we can actually
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see chemical shift that develops.
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And that's manifested by alternating
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dark and bright T2 signal lines in
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the frequency-encoding direction.
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So even if, for example, your fat saturation
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didn't work or didn't look very good, you can
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look at the T2-weighted images and look for
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these alternating bands of dark and bright
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signal that we see here, and that indicates that
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there's both fat and water within the lesion.
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And then we know that the frequency
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encoding direction is going from left to
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right because the fat and water frequencies
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are being separated in that direction.
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Typically, we don't require gadolinium
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unless there's concern for malignant
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transformation, but that's totally institution
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dependent and up to your own preference.
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In and out of phase is rarely helpful.
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Because we're looking at macroscopic fat and
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not dissolved fat or intracellular lipid.
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So the complications of teratoma, I
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showed you on the last set of images,
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and I'll just go back to those briefly.
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We've got some free fluid here, so
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maybe a chemical peritonitis, possibly a
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rupture from one of those ovarian lesions.
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Anytime you have a large ovarian mass, there's
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a risk of it twisting on its pedicle, causing
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torsion, and then malignant transformation
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would be the other main complication.
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