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45-Yr-Old with Incidental Right Renal Mass

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Well, this is a 45-year-old physician who

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had a CT for another reason and had a lesion

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or a mass incidentally discovered in the

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patient's right kidney, the viewer's left.

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So the four images I have up are an in-phase

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GRE, so-called IPGRE, an out-of-phase or OOPGRE.

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I've got an axial T2, spin echo, water

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weighted image without fat suppression

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on the lower left and on the lower right.

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I've got a very early arterial phase.

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The contrast hasn't reached the kidney yet.

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So this is a T1 GRE, a T1 appearing

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GRE without contrast yet in the kidney.

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So essentially, a non-contrast image of this

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lesion that is superficially located posteriorly.

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So the whole point here is to discuss a

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hypo-intense lesion arising from the kidney.

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So here we are, T2 dark lesions again.

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So our diagnostic differential with T2

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dark lesions are going to be a papillary

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RCC, a hemorrhagic cyst, or lipid-poor AML.

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So going through that exercise, we go right

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to the T1 to see what it looks like on T1.

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And as we talked about in the prior vignette, we look

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at the brightness on T1, and can we describe it as

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being a bloody cyst, being 2 to 2.5 times background?

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If it is, we can clearly be confident that

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it's a hemorrhagic cyst and put it to rest.

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Unfortunately, in this case, it's

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not 2 to 2.5 times background.

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So, we have to take hemorrhagic

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cysts out of our differential.

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And the two that we are worrying with now

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are, are we dealing with a lipid-poor AML?

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Or are we dealing with a typical hemorrhagic cyst?

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You know, that just, um, you

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know, doesn't meet all the criteria or

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are we dealing with a papillary RCC?

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So we can go to our in-phase out-of-phase to see

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if we can find either bulk fat or intravoxel fat.

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So what do you think?

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Well, let's put up the appropriate images.

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Here's the in-phase and here's

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the out-of-phase of this lesion.

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I don't really see much dropout in it at all.

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Right, so I see no dropout to confirm intravoxel

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fat, and I don't see an India ink interposed

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between the fluid and the lesion to suggest bulk fat.

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So what

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you mean is there's no interface right

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here between the, the, uh, water in

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the renal parenchyma and the lesion.

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That's correct.

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So this India ink sign should go right

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on through this lesion if it was a

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fat-containing lesion, and it doesn't.

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Or, said another way, or shown another

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way, you should see it right here, and you don't.

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So, no India ink sign, no dropout, no

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microscopic fat, no macroscopic fat.

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And as far as the signal, if you're using the

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background, the background is the renal parenchyma.

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It's almost iso-intense, equal to the renal parenchyma.

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So it doesn't in any way fit the

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profile of a hemorrhagic cyst.

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And, in fact, it also doesn't

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fit the profile of an AML either.

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That's right.

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So we're still stuck with,

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uh, is this a lipid-poor AML?

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Is this a papillary RCC?

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Or is this just a hemorrhagic cyst

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that doesn't meet classic criteria?

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So the next things we would look

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at would be, how does it enhance?

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So let's look at if there's any enhancement,

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and then I would look at diffusion in the sense

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of, um, looking to see if there's restriction.

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If there's restriction, that would also

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err us towards a neoplasm and not a cyst.

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Sure.

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So let's, let's move on in our vignette and talk about,

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uh, the vascular supply of this lesion or lack thereof.

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And, uh, you know, if this is a papillary cancer, they

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are more common in men who are in the right age range.

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So that's still

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in the differential diagnosis.

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Let's move on, shall we?

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Dr. Pina, Dr. Pomeranz, P and P out.

Report

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Vascular

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Neoplastic

MRI

Kidneys

Genitourinary (GU)

Body

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