Interactive Transcript
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Here is another case of chondroblastoma,
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slightly differently, uh, presented,
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but at a similar location.
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For here, I'm going to show you plain films,
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CT scan, and MRI, so you get an idea that this
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really is a cartilage-based type of tumor, which
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is sort of hard to appreciate simply on MRI.
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Here's the plain radiograph.
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We have two images.
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They're very similar projections.
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But basically what I want to show you is
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you've got this relatively well-defined cystic
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sclerotic lesion involving, looks like part
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of the epiphysis, part of the metaphysis.
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And if you look very carefully, you actually
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even have a little bit of periosteal reaction.
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Okay?
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So don't let that bother you.
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You can have periosteal reactions
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in benign lesions, especially if
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it's been injured in some way.
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So don't let that bother you.
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Persuade you into going to
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something more malignant.
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Again, same thing like we talked last time.
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It's centered in the epiphysis,
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extends to the metaphysis.
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One difference is the growth plate isn't fused.
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So here, I may consider giant cell tumor
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slightly higher on the differential diagnosis,
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but I'm going to discount that because
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of the way it appears in the lucent area.
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There are these little lines, the
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serpiginous lines, and you can actually
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see those lines a little bit better on CT.
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The little arcs and whorls which
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are the hallmark of cartilaginous
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ossification or calcification.
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Okay, that's what you're looking for.
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Don't let the fact that you have a
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growth plate that's fused persuade you
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into calling this a giant cell tumor.
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There may be an effusion, hard to tell.
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We'll have to look at the MR for that.
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So now I'm going to switch over to the CT scan.
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We've got a coronal reconstruction
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here of that CT scan.
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This basically is a much more detailed
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image, if you will, of your plain
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radiograph that you just looked at.
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And this is the axial around the same level.
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So remember I mentioned the arcs
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and whorls of the calcification?
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Let me get back to the CT right side here.
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And this is what I'm talking about.
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Right here.
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See these little areas of matrix that sort of
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look like bone marrow that you see elsewhere?
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That's cartilaginous calcification.
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Dark stuff is cartilage.
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And the bright stuff is the cartilage
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that's actually becoming ossified.
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That's why it's called a chondroblastoma,
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because it's a cartilage-based tumor.
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Very, very well-defined, mature periosteal
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reaction that we saw in the plain radiograph.
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Yes, the growth plate is fused, but don't let
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that bother you, because you've got what looks
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like chondroid matrix in the epiphysis, right?
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And so, if that's the case, the majority of these
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lesions, in fact, the vast majority of these
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lesions are going to be chondroblastoma.
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Benign chondroblastoma.
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Now, let's see what the MR looks like.
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Going back here, I'm going to bring down
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our coronal fluid-sensitive
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fat-suppress sequence.
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I'm going to zoom in just a little
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bit so you see what's going on.
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Make it a little darker.
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Okay, so here is our lesion.
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Again, you get the hint that there's some
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arcs and whorls, some complex architecture,
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if you will, within this well-defined mass.
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Centered in the epiphysis.
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Extends to the metaphysis.
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Eccentric in its location.
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Not centered.
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Eccentric.
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Abuts the articular surface,
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but does not penetrate it.
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In this particular case, we
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do have a joint effusion.
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Presence or absence should not
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dissuade you from a chondroblastoma.
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And what else?
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Edema.
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Look at all this edema that
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you have around this lesion.
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You should have edema around
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a chondroblastoma lesion.
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So this is benign, and it may need to get fixed.
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You know, they may have to go in there
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and curettage it out, prevent pathological
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fractures, but this is not malignant.
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It probably won't come back once it's fixed.
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