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The “India Ink Sign” on MRI

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Dr. Finazzo, let's introduce one of the tools

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3 00:00:03,420 --> 00:00:06,300 in MRI, which is the analysis of fat on MR.

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And I've got an in-phase gradient echo, an out

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of-phase gradient echo, so-called OOPGRE, an IP,

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in-phase gradient echo on the left, and then on

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the right is a T2 spin echo with fat suppression.

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Now, for those of you youngins out there, the

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reason you know this is an out-of-phase MRI is

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because of this India ink appearance of structures.

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That contain water, like the kidney.

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The kidney has water in it, surrounded by fat.

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So, if I outline this India ink phenomenon,

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it's this black line right here.

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That.

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Because you have water inside the kidney

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against fat in the retroperitoneum.

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And this is called chemical shift

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effect, if you want the science of it.

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Which occurs in the X-encoded direction.

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Which is right to left or left to right.

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Now, if we now analyze our mass, which is a cyst,

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basically, it's got water signal intensity on these

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gradient echo images and water signal intensity on

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the T2, and we look at the mass, we see that there

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is that black line between our water-containing

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mass, I'll draw over it again right there,

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and the surrounding fat.

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On the other hand, if we look at our out-of-phase

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image, and by the way, if you want to know how to do

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this, all you've got to do is look at your manual.

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Your vendor is going to tell you.

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Here's the T.E.

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35 00:01:30,555 --> 00:01:33,725 you choose for out-of-phase imaging, happens to be

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2.2, and here's the T.E.

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38 00:01:35,295 --> 00:01:36,805 you use for in-phase imaging.

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So you don't have to memorize that,

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it's going to come in a little booklet for you.

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Now look at your lesion, which has water in it,

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your so-called cyst against the water inside the

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kidney, a water-containing structure, water against

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water, no India ink black interface between the two.

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So if you could go ahead now and help us define

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how you use that and what it means in terms

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of bulk fat and voxel fat or intravoxel fat.

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So, a couple of things.

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So whenever we look, we're looking for fat

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really in cases to try to distinguish, uh,

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angiomyolipomas from renal cell carcinoma.

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Because as we know, both, uh, AMLs and renal

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cysts, uh, excuse me, both angiomyolipomas

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and clear cell carcinomas will enhance.

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And how we can differentiate those two

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entities is by identifying bulk fat.

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And if we can see bulk fat, we can say clearly

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it's an AML and go on to the next case.

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Bulk fat is macroscopic fat.

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61 00:02:44,334 --> 00:02:46,594 Bulk fat is macroscopic fat,

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and that's when we see this chemical shift.

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And as you had pointed out,

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when you see, uh, India ink interposed between a

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lesion and bulk fat, then you're not dealing

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with bulk fat within the lesion itself.

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And in this example, we know we're dealing

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with a non-bulk fat lesion because we don't see

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this line either internally between fluid and

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fluid interface or within the lesion itself.

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In a companion case to that, where we were asked

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to evaluate an indeterminate small renal mass.

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And here in the in-phase, out-of-phase.

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We clearly see an India ink, uh, interface

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between the lesion and the kidney, which

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is, you know, vascular, fluid, and vascular.

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So this line lets us know that

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we're dealing with bulk fat.

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And this is an angiomyolipoma in a

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classic woman who's 43 years old.

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Um, and even though this is a very

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easy example to illustrate, finding

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bulk fat is sometimes very difficult.

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And another tool you can use is

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your fat-suppressed sequences.

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And in this case, for example, the T2 fat

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suppressed, it follows fat on all sequences.

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But the reality is, is CT, even though

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this is an MR core, CT is, uh, more, uh,

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favorable in trying to identify bulk.

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So just to summarize, in the other case

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we showed, we had a mass that was water.

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And it was surrounded by fat.

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So we had water against the background.

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I'll make the fat a different color.

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I'll make the fat blue.

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And then between those two interfaces, we had an

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India ink sign because we had water against fat.

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So we had the interface out here.

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In this case, we've got a fatty lesion in the

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center surrounded by water inside the kidney.

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And so we have the India ink sign,

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fat with a background of water.

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And then you top that off by saying, on the

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T2 fat suppression image, which is on the

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far right, the signal intensity of our fat

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containing lesion suppressed just like the

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subcutaneous fat in the back of the patient.

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Pomeranz and Finazzo out.

Report

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Neoplastic

MRI

Kidneys

Genitourinary (GU)

Body

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