Interactive Transcript
0:01
Alright, we're going to go to case 2 now.
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So, this is our compare and contrast case.
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And I'm going to start with this image here.
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What we've got here on the left is a
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the subtraction image and on the right, I've got the subtraction image.
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And these really sort of have most
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of the information, but I'm going to scroll up and down.
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Let's see if we can get this to zoom up a bit,
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I'm just going to go up and down a little bit through that one on the
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left hand image on the subtraction image.
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And you could put that poll up please, Ashley.
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This is a 64-year-old lady.
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I'm going to withhold the rest of her history.
1:01
All right, let's look at the result of that one.
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All right, so we've got most people voting
1:05
here for Paget disease, which is correct.
1:08
This is Paget disease.
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And you can see here, in this particular patient,
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that we really have very...
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Let me just go into this.
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We have very asymmetric, and in this case, superficial nipple enhancement.
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You see, it really is the skin of this right nipple that is enhancing.
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But not only that, we've got,
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and she did present with Paget disease of the nipple.
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We have this clumped segmental enhancement extending posteriorly,
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and it really extends pretty much all the way up to the nipple.
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You can see it coming up here in this area here, all the way up to the nipple.
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It's very much seems to be forming along the ducts.
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A very typical for DCIS.
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And this is what we call typical for a clumped enhancement pattern.
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You can imagine it, just like little
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separate little foci of DCIS within that duct, but overall forming a segmental
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or triangular shape distribution with the tip pointed towards the nipple.
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Now, the other things that we talked about,
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we talked about inverted nipple, which we saw before.
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This nipple clearly is not inverted.
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Obviously the past case, what we thought it was going to end up
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being was a papilloma before we realized it was an inverted nipple.
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And if we're seeing little focal enhancing
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areas behind the nipple, they certainly are most typically a papillomas.
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But nipples do enhance normally, but they should enhance
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relatively symmetrically, although it's going to be an asymmetric
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distribution if one of those nipples is enhanced.
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