Interactive Transcript
0:01
So we're going to look at a case, and this
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is a 52-year-old woman who we've been
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following for a 4-millimeter focus in
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the right breast, and she's also having
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general bilateral high-risk screening.
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So this is our patient, and on the left
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side of the screen, we have our MIP.
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We see lots of blood vessels and a
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few scattered foci of enhancement,
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maybe one peeking out here.
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That's a little bit more prominent.
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And we're going to look at
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our first subtracted series.
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It's going to start from the top here
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and mostly vessels.
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So far, when we get to this area, there
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is one focus here that stands out as
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being different from the background.
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And that is the focus that we're following.
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We look through, you know, of course we
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would go through this image by image,
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and You know, we did not see anything else.
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It was just that one
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focus there.
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We can look at our STIR
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images, which are also linked.
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And you know, we were looking to see
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whether this focus is T2 hyperintense,
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but you can see that the entire
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breast tissue is T2 hyperintense.
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It's really difficult to say
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whether this one little area
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is actually T2 bright.
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I don't think we can say that for sure.
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We have a T1 sequence,
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which is not really, you know, other than her
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normal anatomy, is not showing us anything new.
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She has had an excisional biopsy
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here, and I think you see it
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nicely on the T1-weighted images.
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So it's in the lower outer
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left breast at posterior depth.
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She's had an excisional biopsy.
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And then what I meant by
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looking at the T1 pre and post.
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So pre is on your left side of the screen,
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post is on the right side of the screen.
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If we go ahead and look at that from top to
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bottom, you'll see areas that are enhancing.
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And if we go to find that one
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focus that we're following.
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There it is.
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So you can see that before we gave contrast,
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it was not enhancing, and now it is, you know,
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so that's why it shows up on the subtraction
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images, and really nothing else in either breast.
2:59
So this lady has a 4-millimeter focus
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of enhancement in the right breast.
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And we had a few other exams.
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This was initially seen a year ago on a
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baseline screening, and then followed up at
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six months, and it was stable at six months,
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so now it's being followed again at six months,
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so now it's been stable for a year, and at
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this point we can go forward another year.
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She'd be due for a high-risk screening in a
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year, and we'll see her again and take a look at
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that focus again if it's stable for two years.
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That meets criteria for being benign.
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So, you know, even though we'll look at her
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every year and we'll take note of that focus,
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we don't have to specifically follow it again.
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So I just wanted to show you what the
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report on this patient would look like.
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And we use templated
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reporting, which I'll show you.
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Basically, we're going to have a
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heading stating the type of exam.
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We're going to have the history.
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That it's a 52-year-old woman seen
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for follow-up of a 4-millimeter
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focus in the right central breast.
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She has a history of excisional biopsy for a
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typical ductal hyperplasia in the left breast.
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We usually put in a comment about the last
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menstrual period, where it was, whether
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they're post-menopausal, post-hysterectomy,
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whatever the patient has had a hysterectomy,
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we state what that exam were compared,
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if there were prior MRIs, we state that
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as well, and then we have a technique.
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Paragraph, which describes what has been
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done, you know, basically patient was positioned
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prone with a dedicated breast coil on a
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3T scanner. Bilateral T1-weighted
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axial three-dimensional images were obtained.
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This was followed by fat-saturated
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T2-weighted imaging.
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We then obtained a three-dimensional
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spoiled gradient echo volume acquisition
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with fat suppression prior to and
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three times sequentially following
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the intravenous administration of 6.5 milliliters of,
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and then, you know,
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you put your contrast agent in here.
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The dynamic sequence was viewed with
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subtraction technique in the axial projection.
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So this is part of our template, you know,
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we're not dictating this all again every time.
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And then we have a section for the
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amount of fibroglandular tissue in
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this case heterogeneous, and the
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background parenchymal enhancement,
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which in this case is mild.
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And then we have findings for
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the right and left breast.
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And on the right, we have the 4-millimeter
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focus that we were following.
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We say which series and image we're
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seeing it on, and then that it's stable
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for one year and compared to this
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date, that there's nothing new that's
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suspicious and everything else looks good.
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Left breast, we've got our
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post-operative changes,
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few scattered foci of
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enhancement, and nothing else.
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We usually make a comment about the
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axillary lymph nodes, even if they're
6:01
negative, as a pertinent negative.
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And then we have kinetic analysis.
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You know, what kind of workstation was used,
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and if there are any other findings,
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this person has liver cysts,
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so we mention that.
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And then our impression is no change
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in this focus, stable for one year,
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and no new suspicious findings.
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And then in our recommendation section,
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we'll usually say what we're recommending
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as far as the MRI, but also if the patient
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is going to have some other type of breast
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imaging, like if they're going to be due
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for a screening mammogram in six months
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or whatever, we'll put that in, usually
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with the month and year that it's due.
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And then, you know, for this patient follow
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up bilateral breast MRI in a year, and our Bi-
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Rads category is BI-RADS 3, probably benign.
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We also put at the bottom of the report; it's
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not here for this case, but for instance,
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if we're recommending a biopsy, we'll put in
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a statement about the fact that the results
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and recommendations were discussed with
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the patient or with the referring provider,
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doctor, so and so, on this date at this time.
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So we put in that, you know, the
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critical finding was communicated,
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and then, of course, we communicated as well.
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