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Diffusion Restriction in Hypernephroma

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0:01

Dr. Farnaz, we're back with our, our lady,

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3 00:00:03,320 --> 00:00:05,649 our gal, with, uh, renal cell carcinoma.

0:05

As you know, they're more common in men.

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And 95% of the time, they're sporadic.

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But about 5% of the time,

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they can be syndromic or familial.

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The classic one is von Hippel-Lindau.

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Another one would be tuberous sclerosis.

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They can also get renal cell carcinoma.

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But you and I were chatting on the side

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about, uh, diffusion imaging, and in our prior

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vignette, we got into some detail about it.

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And said that viscosity, high viscosity

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necrosis can produce diffusion restriction.

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But these are not particularly cell-packed lesions.

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But some people are using diffusion, uh,

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to assess for hypernephroma recurrence.

0:41

Can you tell us a little bit about that?

0:42

Yeah, and that's true.

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People are having a trend, especially in patients

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who've already had nephrectomy, and they don't want

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to be predisposed to any risks of giving contrast.

0:52

The pitfall that we really have to pay attention

0:56

to is renal cell, clear-celled renal cell, tends

1:00

to invade veins and will expand veins, but we

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can't, uh, count, we can't use diffusion, uh,

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to help us determine vascular invasion because

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of the low cellularity that these lesions are.

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We can miss vein invasion.

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And which we've seen that, uh,

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on different circumstances before.

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Is there another potential problem?

1:24

35 00:01:26,130 --> 00:01:28,050 If the lesion doesn't, if the primary

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doesn't diffusion restrict, what about

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the metastases or the other lesions?

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That's exactly right.

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They might or might not diffusion restrict as well.

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And then I'll leave you with one last point.

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Um, the pathologic rating for renal cell

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carcinoma includes the Furhman grading system.

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I'm not going to give that to you right now.

1:43

But if there's necrosis, there's more

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likely to be diffusion restriction

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from hyperviscosity and necrosis

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correlates with Furhman grades 3 and 4.

1:52

Shall we move on?

1:53

Yes.

1:54

Let's.

Report

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Neoplastic

MRI

Kidneys

Genitourinary (GU)

Body

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