Interactive Transcript
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Hi, this is Marc Gosselin.
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We're going to now keep going with the
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Cardiopulmonary Imaging Master Series.
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This session is going to be on aspiration
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and aspiration is a very common thing
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that we see, especially in ICU patients.
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Um, the objective is to understand how
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common it is and that it is most likely,
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the cause of low-grade
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fever in these ICU patients.
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And as in our previous episode or
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previous sessions, atelectasis is not.
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Atelectasis is not a cause for fever.
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That is a myth.
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And if you still teach it, you need to stop.
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Recognize the common imaging
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findings of aspiration.
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We'll go over them and we'll briefly just kind
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of review again, compare and contrast the CT
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enhancement of atelectasis versus consolidation.
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So, this is an ICU patient, endotracheal tube,
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central line, and what we have here is bilateral
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lower lobe areas of ill-defined opacity.
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We see some of the vessels of ground glass,
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other areas we don't, consistent with consolidation.
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What you notice, though, is that margins
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are a little ill-defined, and the
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patient does have a low-grade fever.
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Well, rather than saying, well, it's the atelectasis
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No, this is more consistent with aspiration.
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Now, another term that is commonly
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used, and you feel free to use it,
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is the term retained secretions.
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People who just can't cough
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up their bronchial secretions.
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And that can sometimes have
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an overlap in appearance.
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So, you know, if it's clearly a big
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consolidation, you know, call it aspiration.
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If you're not sure, you know,
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aspiration/retained secretions.
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And then again, this is most likely
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the cause of low-grade fevers.
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What does it look like?
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Well, it looks different
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than atelectasis in most cases.
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You might see the poorly defined three
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to four-millimeter clustered nodules.
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That's really key.
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It spares the subpleural area.
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So if it looks like it's touching the pleura,
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that's probably more of a consolidation.
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This is the so-called budding tree.
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Right?
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Appearance, and that's what it looks like in a
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radiograph, three to four-millimeter nodularity.
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There'll be airway thickening, mucous
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plugging, and the other thing you might notice
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is you'll just gestalt the radiograph, and
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it just looks busy, and if it looks busy,
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and you see that kind of clustered three
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to four-millimeter nodularity, probably
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some aspiration/retained secretions.
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It's gravity-based and that's the key thing.
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It just kind of goes down to the lowest
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point of the terminal bronchioles.
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If you're lying on your side, that's usually
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part of the lung that overlies the axilla.
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If you're upright, it's going to
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be middle lobe and lower lobes.
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Um, That's the key, it's gravity-based.
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Just a quick, um, statement about this so
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called dense hilum or B6 side, anybody who's
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intubated or been extubated on a supine, the
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the hilum will look big and ill-defined and dense.
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The hilum is not changed.
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That is simply atelectasis or aspiration
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slash retained secretions in the superior
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segments of the lower lobes overlapping.
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And this is what it looks like.
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Look at the hilum.
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Endotracheal tube removed.
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Now look at the hilum.
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The hilum really are exactly the same.
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The pulmonary arteries haven't changed,
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but this ill-defined nodular kind of
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consolidated process and increased density,
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it's more white, represents the aspirated
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secretions that are in the superior segment.
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This is often misdiagnosed as
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pulmonary congestion and edema.
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It is not.
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It is a normal variant.
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Another patient.
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What do you see?
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Well, it's busy.
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You see a lot of three to
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four-millimeter nodularity.
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It spares the subpleural.
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It's in the dependent portions of both lower
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lobes, posterior segment of the upper lobe.
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This is an aspiration.
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You can see aspiration is airway nodular.
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Related.
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And you can see the dependent
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portion, some of it's coalescing.
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This is characteristic for aspiration pneumonitis.
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If this were a trauma patient,
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this is aspiration, not contusion.
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Why?
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Because contusion doesn't bleed
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just in the airways, right?
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So this is aspiration.
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Low-grade fever.
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Now, just to compare again with our
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previous session, this is atelectasis.
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Notice it's got sharp margins
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and radiates from the hilum.
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That's what atelectasis is.
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It doesn't cause fever.
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This is different.
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Look at this.
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Slightly busy here.
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Witness aspiration.
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You see these little three to four-millimeter
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branching clustered nodules, sparing the
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subpleural dependent portion of the lung.
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This is aspiration pneumonitis/retained secretions.
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This is a few days later.
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This induces a low-grade chemical pneumonitis
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and is a likely cause for low-grade fever.
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Think about it.
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When a patient is aspirating, they're usually
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kind of on their PCA pump of morphine.
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They're aspirating small amounts.
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When you wake them up, have them use the
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incentive spirometer, they cough it up.
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Clear it, and the fever goes away.
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That has been mistaught in our, by, um, by
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the many generations of physicians as saying,
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see, that's why atelectasis causes fever.
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No, it was.
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It was aspiration all along, uh, patient with a
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feeding tube going in the wrong direction, feeding
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up the esophagus and then down into the lung.
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Large amount of aspiration.
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You should be aware of the endotracheal
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tube does not protect you from aspiration.
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It can still occur.
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In fact, does almost 24 seven in
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this case, that aspiration is more
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than just an aspiration pneumonitis.
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That's a full-on consolidation
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and likely high-grade fevers.
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Aspiration pneumonia.
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Another patient with high-grade fevers.
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Remember, aspiration pneumonitis,
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it'll give you low-grade fevers.
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Atelectasis gives you no fever.
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161 00:05:58,855 --> 00:06:00,764 Aspiration-based infectious
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pneumonia, high-grade fevers.
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And that can be a useful way to
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help differentiate the three, okay?
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That's a big consolidated
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aspiration-based pneumonia.
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Word of wise, Aspiration pneumonia is
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almost always gram-negative bacteria.
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The so-called anaerobic, that was from
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the 50s with the skid row, bad dentition.
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So we don't see that as much anymore.
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Aspiration pneumonia should equal gram-
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negative bacteria like Pseudomonas.
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Just as a review, If you have a contrast-
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enhanced CT scan, pneumonia or consolidation
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enhances less than atelectasis.
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Atelectasis, all the vessels are together.
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It fills with the contrast and is very bright.
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Consolidation, the vessels are separated.
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It does not enhance to the same degree.
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It should enhance the same as the
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paraspinal muscles, and it does.
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Atelectasis enhances much more.
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So if you're someone who says it could
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be atelectasis or pneumonia and a
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CT that's contrast-enhanced, you can
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favor one very strongly over another.
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So with that, Uh, let's review,
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atelectasis is not a cause for fever,
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please don't propagate that myth.
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It's most likely aspiration,
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which will be gravitational.
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Look for the busy clustered nodularity,
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um, and remember that atelectasis and
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consolidation enhance differently.
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Thank you very much.
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