Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Finazzo, we're back with our 45-year-old physician, uh,
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3 00:00:04,210 --> 00:00:06,710 who we studied and evaluated on the prior vignette.
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He had this low signal T2 lesion,
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or hypointense lesion, uh, seen on an MRI that was
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incidentally discovered on a CT for another reason.
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And I've got before you,
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essentially, the non-contrast MRI.
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I've got a little bit of arterial phase contamination.
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There's our lesion.
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And then we have phase 1, phase 2, phase 3, a
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subtraction in the lower left-hand corner, and in the
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lower right-hand corner in the blue trunks, we've got a
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delayed, uh, T1 MRI, where we've actually measured the
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signal intensity, and we'll talk about how to do that.
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And
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that's exactly what our goal is at this point is, is
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there an enhancement, is this a solid lesion or not?
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Um, and so basically when we look at our
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arterial and portal venous phase imaging,
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uh, papillary RCCs tend to hyperextend,
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bow enhance, or demonstrate
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slow progressive enhancement.
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So what we want to do is we want to look at the
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maximum enhancement on the post-contrast and compare
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it to the pre-contrast examination as one option.
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If we can't visually see it or can't measurably see
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it, then we try to use our subtraction images to look
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for enhancement, making sure that we realize and look
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for any misregistration, uh, too much signal noise.
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Um, and then if that doesn't help, we then
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go to our diffusion to look to see if there's
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any restricted lesion that we can also suggest
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that it's a solid, uh, highly cellular lesion.
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So we might have a little bit of
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misregistration right here, and you would
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look at the edge of the liver to, to see that.
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And I think you alluded to this, um, Mr.
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Signal intensity index, uh, SII we'll call it.
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And that's gonna consist of the signal intensity post.
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So post-SI minus pre-SI over pre-SI.
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And I think you had mentioned that a rise of 15 percent
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or greater would suggest the presence of a neoplasm.
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As opposed to either some type of low-grade
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or reactive or inflammatory enhancement.
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That's correct.
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And we use percentages and although physicists
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don't like us to use that because there's really
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no noise map that maps the pre and the post.
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Uh, we've all accepted a 15 percent change
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as being acceptable to document enhancement.
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But again, beware.
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That we can get misregistration on our subtraction
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images so as not to over-call, uh, pseudo enhancement.
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And secondly, be very careful when the area
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you're trying to draw your region of interest.
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Interest in the area that most maximally enhances
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and we can get artifact if the, if the region of
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interest that we're trying to measure is too small.
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So in, in summary, we want to make sure that
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the area of enhancement is not too small
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and that we're not getting misregistration
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in the subtraction-weighted images.
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And you pointed this out to me earlier in papillary
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tumors, which men get, and they are, you know,
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strongly in the differential diagnosis here.
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They're multiple about, uh, you know, 23
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percent of the time, bilateral 4 percent
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of the time, this is a single one.
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You said, when you're, when you're looking
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at subtractions, yes, you should subtract
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early on, but when you have a lesion that does
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basically this, it enhances kind of very slowly.
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If you subtract too early down here,
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you're not going to see anything.
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So you want to subtract. If you're going to do
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an early subtraction, you should certainly do a
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late subtraction, which I haven't provided you
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with here, to make sure there is no enhancement.
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Thank you.
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Now, one other thing, one other exercise you
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and I did is we went over to this delayed
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one here, and we did an ROI, which you drew.
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We got just a little bit under 1,000 for
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the signal intensity here, and we got close
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to 1,000 here, and close to 1,000 here.
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So, the signal intensity matched almost
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exactly in an earlier arterial phase,
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in the pre and in the delayed post.
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So, we were both comfortable that it was not enhancing.
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That it was not enhancing.
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And that's fact number one.
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And then number two, in the diffusion-restricted
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images, we don't see any restricted diffusion.
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So, that also helps us feel comfortable that we're
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probably dealing with a benign proteinaceous cyst.
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Uh, and on a second point, papillary neoplasms
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are, uh, you know, not as aggressive as a cystic
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renal cell, so we can feel comfortable to watch
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these lesions and, you know, 3 centimeters is
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the criteria that everybody feels comfortable, 2.
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5, 3 centimeters, until we
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want to do something about it.
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So, I feel comfortable in every
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aspect to watch this lesion.
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Yeah, and if there was diffusion restriction, for
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those of you that are new to MRI or not that familiar
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with, you know, on the diffusion-weighted image.
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You'd see something that was white
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or brighter as the B value goes up.
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And when you do the ADC map, it
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would look nice and dark over here.
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We don't, we don't have that in this case.
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Now, it's said that papillary cancer
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arises from a cell that's very similar
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to the proximal convoluted tubule.
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I don't know how that plays into
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the signal intensity character.
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But in this particular patient,
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we, we, we got a 3-month follow-up.
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It was exactly the same.
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We're gonna do a 6-month follow-up
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from there, then a 9, then a 12.
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As opposed to doing anything more invasive,
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we've chosen a very conservative approach.
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And so far, all is good.
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Alright, the two Ps are out.
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