Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Pomeranz back with your 5-year-old
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3 00:00:03,469 --> 00:00:05,880 who has a right renal mass Wilms tumor.
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And we've got a coronal contrast-enhanced
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MRI showing the tumor and the peritumoral and
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subcapsular hematoma or hemorrhage around it.
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Uh, which we said could also occur in the
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rhabdoid tumor, although this isn't one.
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And then the MRV, which I find helpful, although I like
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the raw data and other information better, actually.
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Dr. Pomeranz.
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13 00:00:30,140 --> 00:00:32,380 to evaluate the renal vein and renal artery.
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I can see it very well.
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And you can even use non-contrast imaging,
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such as arterial spin labeling on certain
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scanners, to show the integrity of the vessels.
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I like that the best in a child because
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I don't like to give gadolinium unless
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I absolutely positively, uh, have to.
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Now, in this case, we see the
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integrity of the right renal vein.
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It's nice and thin and collapsed.
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We're also able to see the right renal artery,
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which is unencumbered; there it is right
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there, on the MIPT MRA and MRV; there's the
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renal vein on the MRV, so it’s patent.
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And then I do have dynamic imaging; I'm not going
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to show it to you, but here is the delayed contrast
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T1-weighted image, showing that the lesion is
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hypervascular, that there are foci of hemorrhage
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and necrosis associated with this mass.
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That's protruding anteriorly.
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But all in all, initially the kidney is going
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to be more vascular than the mass itself.
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So the mass is going to be a little
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bit hypovascular relative to the very
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vascular structure that is the kidney.
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Contrast is also going to be helpful in staging
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this lesion, showing you satellite lesions,
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looking for lymph nodes, looking for contralateral
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disease, looking for metastatic disease.
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And it's imperative that you
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go step by step through these.
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Examination of the renal vein and IVC is a
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critical component to evaluating any pediatric
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renal tumor, but especially Wilms tumors.
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Because 4 to 10 percent, uh, probably on the
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average about 7 percent, hit the renal vein and
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the IVC, which totally affects surgical planning.
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Diagnosis of tumor rupture.
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It's also easier looking for implants outside
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the kidney with contrast-enhanced MRI.
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It helps in therapy planning
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and chemotherapy planning, etc.
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People that have tumor rupture
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have poorly defined margins.
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The perinephric fat is ill-defined.
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There's retroperitoneal fluid.
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There's effusion.
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And there's frequently, uh, peritoneal fluid
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extending beyond the cul-de-sac, and that's
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the reason I haven't shown it to you that
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we imaged the pelvis in this child which was
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clean and did not have any free pelvic fluid.
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So you are going to want to image the pelvis
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in these individuals as part of the examination.
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Where do these tumors go elsewhere?
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Well, they go to the lung 85 percent of the time.
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So a CT of the lung
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is imperative.
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Liver 20 percent of the time, but
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rarely the bone, in contradistinction to
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neuroblastoma, which likes to go to the bone.
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So the use of chest radiography and CT of the
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lungs for lung metastasis is part of the workup
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for Wilms tumors, and some of these patients
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will go on and get fluorodeoxyglucose PET.
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Dr. P out.
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