Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Finazzo, this 84-year-old lady. We're back with her
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3 00:00:03,690 --> 00:00:06,650 again, and she's got this lower pole hyperintense
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lesion in the out-of-phase and in-phase, uh, GRE.
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Um, let's match it up, and we can see
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on the T2, it's low signal intensity.
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The FATSAT, it's also low.
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Here's the coronal, it's got a mixed
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low signal intensity character.
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And then we've enhanced it
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all the way across the board.
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It does not diffusion restrict at the bottom,
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and here is the subtraction at the bottom.
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So what are we going to do with this lesion?
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So this is another classic example of how, uh,
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complex cystic lesions can look very different on MRI.
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But we can still feel comfortable that this is probably
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a watch lesion, rather than, uh, being aggressive.
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And when I look at the T2 image, I
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see a heterogeneously complex lesion,
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not like the other cysts that we saw.
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Thank you.
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Then I go to the T1 sequence, and I see
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that the lesion is bright, making me think
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that there could be hemorrhagic components.
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Sure, and that's
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before contrast.
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And that's
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before contrast.
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But this is a diagnostic dilemma, which is probably
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why we received this, is, is there enhancement?
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And this is where MRI really has the biggest
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benefit, is trying to identify enhancement.
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Uh, I struggle to look at the pre and
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the post if I were to magnify these to
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determine, is there real enhancement?
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And as we talked about on the prior vignette, can we
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take the post minus the pre divided by the pre and
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look and identify more than 15 percent enhancement?
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And secondly, and, and if not, can we
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look at the subtractions to help us out?
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Thank you.
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And here, we don't see anything
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that we can clearly say enhances.
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Yeah, there's this little spot
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that you and I noticed earlier.
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This may be a little bit of
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disregistration, which we do have.
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Perhaps it is a little bit of enhancement.
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There is some diffusion restriction there, however.
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So I think the jury is probably out on this
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one, although more likely in an 84-year-old lady
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with everything else going on, it is a cyst.
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And I, I think you would probably elect for
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watchful waiting on this one, wouldn't you?
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That's exactly right, and if you look at
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the size also, uh, there have been articles
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written that anything greater than, less than
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3 centimeters, we can leave, we can watch.
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And one other thing I did want to point out is, you
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know, if you look at this lesion as a standalone on
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the T2, you might think about a papillary tumor, uh,
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papillary carcinoma, which occurs more frequently
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in men, but it does have some internal architecture
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change, which. But then when you match it up and you go
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over to the, to the T1 in-phase image, many papillary
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cancers with this internal complexity and some
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papillary projections have siderotic material inside.
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And, and so on, on the, on the in-phase T1
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type image, they're, they're gonna be dark
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more likely than they are to be
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white, like say an AML or a hemorrhagic cyst.
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So that can be very helpful, the fact that it's
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bright on the T1 GRE goes against the papillary tumor.
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And there are two types.
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There's the classic type 1, which is basophilic, not
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very aggressive at all with cuboidal epithelium, and
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then there's the type 2 that you and I were talking
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about, which is kind of this ethereal, kind of mixed
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bag of a lesion with eosinophilic character to it.
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It's more pleomorphic, it's more aggressive, has a more
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guarded prognosis, and that classification may change.
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But the fact that this lesion is not dark
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and dark goes against the diagnosis of a
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papillary tumor, as does the fact that you
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know, it doesn't have much enhancement at all.
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Shall we move on to the next renal
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lesion in this 84-year-old lady?
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Sure.
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Let's do it.
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