Interactive Transcript
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Okay, so here is a case of a
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patient with bilateral teratomas.
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So again, for my female pelvis MR
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cases, I tend to start with the
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sagittal just to get a lay of the land.
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So I know the uterus is anteverted.
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I take a quick look at the
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junctional zone and the endometrium.
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You can see there are a few
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cervical nabothian cysts.
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Typically, we ask our patients to
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empty their bladder prior to the study,
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just so that there's no peristalsis
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from bladder filling or overfilling.
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Unless we're imaging the bladder or the urethra,
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those would really be the main situations
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where we would ask the bladder to remain full.
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But otherwise, I find that with a full
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bladder, it tends to displace the uterus
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sometimes, and then as the bladder gets
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overfull, it peristalsis and causes some
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degradation of, of diagnostic quality.
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Okay, so again, a quick overview, anterior,
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middle, and posterior compartments, and
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right away in the posterior compartment,
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you can see there's an abnormal structure
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there, and maybe another structure.
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Okay, so now we look for the
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ovaries, so that's the second step.
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So these are my Small field of view,
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T2 weighted images on the bottom
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left that I'm scrolling through now.
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So, Normally the ovary would be right
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around here and you can see that
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there's an enlarged structure here
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and a similar finding on the right side.
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So we're seeing a few little follicles,
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but then we're seeing these abnormal
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mass-like structures as well.
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So now the next question is: what are these?
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So we know that they have high T2 signal
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within them, and then some debris or layering
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material. This T2-weighted sequence
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has been acquired without fat saturation.
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So you can see the subcutaneous fat and
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the fat within the pelvis is quite bright.
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Now we're applying fat saturation, and
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we've acquired a T1-weighted sequence with
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fat saturation on the bottom right here.
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So now we can see that these
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areas that were bright without fat
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saturation have now suppressed.
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So there's clearly fat within
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this lesion, and there is some
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layering material that's sort of bright signal
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on T1 and intermediate signal on T2, which
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might represent some proteinaceous material
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or maybe some liquefied fat, potentially.
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And then in the right ovary, again, we're
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seeing fat saturation within that area that
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was high T2 signal without fat saturation.
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And you can see that this patient
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has some rounded or lobulated looking
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structures within one component and
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maybe another component as well.
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So we would want to know if those enhance
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to determine whether there are areas
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of potential malignant transformation.
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So the other feature that I talked
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about briefly was in the last slide,
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was that we have a free clue here.
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So if we look carefully on the T2
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images, we can see that there are some
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alternating lines of bright and dark signal.
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And that's what chemical shift looks like.
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So right away, even without looking
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at the fat-saturated sequences, we can
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see this onion skin pattern.
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And that tells us that there's
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chemical shift within this lesion.
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So it has to contain fat.
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So you can look really smart at
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your boards or, you know, at rounds.
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If you say, "Well, I don't need
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the fat-saturated sequences.
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I can just look at the T2
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and look for chemical shift."
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And then you can impress your colleagues
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or your faculty by knowing that little tidbit of information.
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