Interactive Transcript
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Prostate, coronal, planar anatomy.
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I've taken a representative section.
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Although remember, the anatomy is going
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to vary a bit as you go from front to back
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because in the back of the gland you're
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going to have mostly peripheral zone.
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And you're going to appreciate that when we
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look at a live example of a prostate on MRI.
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But let's begin.
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We've got the transitional
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zone, which is periurethral.
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We've got the urethra and the periurethral tissue.
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And the transitional zone is seen here in yellow.
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Now the transitional zone, as you,
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as you age, is going to get bigger,
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and it often has sort of a globular look to it.
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You know, it expands much like this.
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Almost like two half bowling balls,
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or two bowling balls on each side.
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So it's going to get bigger,
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and as it gets bigger, it's going to start
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to press into the periurethral tissue.
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The central zone and press
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into the peripheral zone.
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The same thing is true of the central zone.
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The central zone is labeled here in orange.
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So let's do something to the central zone.
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Let's make the orange area
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a little bit bigger too.
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So as you age, that's going to get bigger as well.
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And that's also going to press
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into the upper lateral portion.
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peripheral zone.
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Now the peripheral zone is seen here in, in brown.
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You can see it's a pretty large structure.
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What makes MR so valuable though, is not, is
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not seeing this area, but it's seeing this
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area down low, which is so hard to analyze.
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My physical exam, and even by visual inspection
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and biopsy, it's just a hard area to get to.
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And a lot of cancers occur down here.
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Most radiologists don't think to look down here.
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And also anterior in this area is where
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the fibromuscular zone is located.
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Which is dark, and cancers are dark.
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So you have to kind of really tease out
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what's normal tissue and what's cancer.
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And you use the diffusion image, uh, to do that.
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I'm not going to talk about the actual zones.
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If you go to the axial vignette, it'll give you
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the zonal abbreviations for a lot of these areas.
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And I do my zone mapping or
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descriptors in my dictation.
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almost always off the axial projection.
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We also have the seminal vesicles, which are
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secretory glands that contain proteinaceous
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fluid, although they may be desiccated,
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they vary in their signal intensity.
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We've got the ejaculatory ducts or ductus
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deferens, and then two other important structures.
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The margin between the central gland,
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remember the central gland, consists of
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the central zone and the transitional zone.
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So all this is central gland.
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It is separated from the peripheral
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zone by something called, seen here
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in white, the surgical capsule.
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That is really important.
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Because when you have a cancer in the central
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gland, it is often a thick lentiform structure,
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I'll make it black, it's kind of charcoal like.
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As opposed to, say, a nodule, which is round, and
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usually the round, well defined nodules, most of
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the time, in the central gland are benign, but the
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charcoal like lentiform abnormalities are not, and
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they will subtly cross over the surgical capsule.
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And then you have the peripheral
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anatomic capsule, which is the outside
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of the gland, and what's around that?
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Oh, lots of little vessels.
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The, the The perivenous plexus, or the
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periprostatic plexus, is located around here.
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And you saw in the axial vignette
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that you got the neurovascular bundle
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posterolateral at 5 and 7 o'clock.
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So that's our coronal basic basic
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diagram of the prostate gland.
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Remember how important the surgical capsule is.
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Differentiate it from the anatomic capsule.
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And remember that there's going to be some change
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as you go from 30 years old to 80 years old in
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the amount of central gland tissue that's there.
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It's almost always going to
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be bigger as you get older.
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