Interactive Transcript
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This next case is an 80 some year old male who has a history of remote sarcoidosis
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but then would start experience palpitations.
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The question for cardiac MRI was whether
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there was any evidence of acute cardiac sarcoidosis.
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So we're starting here with the cine four
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chamber images, looking at cardiac function.
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And what stands out to me when I look
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at this image is this area of the septum right here.
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You can see that when you're looking
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at the degree of wall motion, that there's good thickening of the mid
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wall of the septum, the apex and the lateral wall.
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But that this basal part of the septum right here is just not really thickening
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to the same degree as the rest of the septum.
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So you have reduced function in the basal septum.
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And as we know, cardiac sarcoidosis really
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likes to involve the septum and the conduction tissue.
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And that all lives right here in this basal septum.
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So this is in a patient, with a history of sarcoidosis,
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this is really suspicious that they've got
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some scarring in this region from cardiac sarcoidosis involvement.
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As we move ahead, the key question here is, do they have acute sarcoidosis?
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And so how do we figure that out?
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We want to look at the edema imaging.
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So these are T2-weighted dark blood images.
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And remember that we really need to window
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these severely to look for any areas of bright signal that might suggest edema.
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Now, these are limited a little bit because of motion artifact.
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You can see the ghosting here,
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but you don't really see anything that stands out from the background.
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Here, maybe a little bit of brightness right
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here, but there's some artifact there, so I'm going to ignore that.
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The rest of it looks okay.
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They actually repeated one of the slices to reduce some of the artifacts.
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And that actually looks nice in uniform
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and signal with no areas that stand out as bright.
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So best we can tell here, no edema.
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If we skip ahead to the short access images and we go to the base of the heart,
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what we're going to see is there is this basal thinning and reduced function.
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So as I move forward,
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you can see here is this basal septum. There's thinning as you go into systole,
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the lateral wall, inferior wall, anterior walls, they're all thickening.
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Whereas this basal septum doesn't really thicken at all.
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It just stays pretty much the same,
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just kind of rocking back and forth with the rest of the cardiac motion.
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So that's an area of akinesia in the basal septum.
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As we move to the mid cavity,
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you can see there is septal thickening right here, right?
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You can see that area.
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The septum is functioning normally as well as the remainder of the wall.
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So it's just really isolated to that basal septum.
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Now, when we go ahead and skip forward
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to the delayed enhancement images, what we're going to find is that there is
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some late enhancement in that basal septum.
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So here's that basal septum. Here, you can see mid-wall, bright signal.
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Relatively normal signal, maybe a bit of noise,
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but otherwise normal, uniform, low signal in the remainder of the left ventricle.
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And then a little more that bright signal
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here as we move towards the apex, and then normal.
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And if we go to a long axis view, you're going to see the same finding.
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You see that the basal septum here has that bright mid-wall signal.
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So this is enhancement in a non ischemic
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pattern, associated with thinning and no edema in a patient with known sarcoidosis.
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So, in summary, the key findings here to report are that you have a patient
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with what looks like chronic myocardial scar in the basal septum in sarcoidosis,
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with no findings suggestive of acute sarcoidosis.
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This patient actually ended up, they didn't, you know,
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believe the MRI or they were still concerned based on his history.
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So he ended up actually getting a PET CT,
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and that PET CT confirmed that there was
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no active cardiac sarcoidosis in the heart.
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So two modalities confirming
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that there was no active disease, only this chronic scarring.
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