Interactive Transcript
0:00
So this is a patient where we can sort of look at them.
0:06
The MIPS going to give us pretty much everything we need to know, I think.
0:10
But, yeah, let's get that loading.
0:15
Now, that's exciting.
0:21
And we're going to look at this up.
0:23
So this patient's history is...
0:30
is a 52-year-old woman with diffuse left breast swelling.
0:39
Stop.
0:41
So this is the left breast, clearly very asymmetric.
0:48
And...
0:53
I'm trying to get it to stop.
0:55
Not very successfully.
0:59
Why don't we bring up the quiz on this one before I make everybody throw up?
1:14
I think the image on the right,
1:16
the MIP, will show you pretty much everything you need to know.
1:38
So this one is diffuse DCIS.
1:41
You could have wondered about inflammatory breast cancer because it's so big.
1:43
But if you look at it, there is no skin enhancement here.
1:48
You know, this was DCIS.
1:50
No invasive carcinomas.
1:51
She obviously went to mastectomy,
1:53
but there's no skin enhancement and no
1:55
skin thickening, which is against inflammatory breast cancer.
1:58
Post-radiation effect,
2:00
if she'd had a history of right breast
2:02
cancer and radiation, then that would be in the differential.
2:05
But this is awfully, even for background parenchymal enhancement,
2:09
this is awfully dense enhancement.
2:12
I didn't show you, but I can show you the color on this patient.
2:16
You can see that a lot of it was fairly
2:18
progressive, but there certainly were some areas of washout in this patient.
2:23
And she had no history of surgery on the right side.
2:26
And previously, both breasts were normal.
2:28
So this was diffuse DCIS.
2:30
So, I'm just going to show you...
2:31
I'll show you a comparison case of a similar patient.
2:40
Just, again, how diffuse DCIS can be
2:44
a little challenging to look at sometimes, and you've always got to think,
2:47
is this asymmetric physiologically?
2:49
Is there a reason to be a asymmetric physiologically?
2:52
Because most patients will be relatively symmetric unless
2:57
they've had prior treatment or surgery to one breast,
3:00
or they have very asymmetrically distributed breast parenchyma.
3:06
So, this is another patient in this case.
3:09
She had a fair amount of background
3:11
parenchymal enhancement, even in her normal breast,
3:15
but you can see that it's clearly, significantly more in her right breast.
3:20
She was a high risk screener.
3:21
This was completely unknown about.
3:24
Again, this enhancement is very clumped.
3:27
Sometimes you'll see this and it will form...
3:29
this one doesn't, and it will form the typical
3:31
clustered ring type appearance, which is pathognomonic for DCIS.
3:36
This one doesn't quite get to that stage,
3:41
but you can see how it's kind of trying
3:43
to be clustered rings, but doesn't quite make it.
3:45
It may be a little bit.
3:46
So you see these little things here,
3:50
that's...
3:51
And let's just...
3:51
I'll just magnify that for you.
3:55
See that little ring-shaped structure right here in the middle?
3:59
That's trying to be clustered rings.
4:01
We have a lot of those and that's pathognomonic for DCIS.
4:04
So think twice about asymmetric background parenchymal enhancement.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.