Interactive Transcript
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Here's a case of a teenager who presented
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with vague, diffuse pelvic pain.
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Ultrasound was performed; it was negative,
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and then plain radiographs were obtained, and
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this is what I'm showing to you right now.
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As you can see, or maybe you can't
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appreciate, but the more you look at
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this, the more you'll realize that the
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appearance of the bone is not normal.
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And it's not just one bone.
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It's the entire bone, right?
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There's areas of lucency
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intermixed with areas of sclerosis.
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And it's not just involving the right
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femur or the left femur or the iliac
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wings or acetabulum or the, or the
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obturator area, ischial tuberosity.
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It's sort of diffuse.
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And unless you sort of pick
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up on that, it can be missed.
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It was first looked at by a non-
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radiologist and was called normal.
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But when it came to our attention, we said,
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you know what, this looks a little funny.
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So let's investigate this a little bit more.
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Okay.
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Uh, by the way, there's a little avulsion injury
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right over here that, in case you missed it,
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and hopefully you looked at the prior vignettes
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showing that, but that's not the issue here.
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The issue here is a very abnormal appearance
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or, or, or brightness of the bone.
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So for that reason, we ended up getting an MRI.
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For the MRI, in the middle we have a T1-
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weighted sequence, and on the right we have
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a fat-suppressed, fluid-sensitive sequence.
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So, I'm going to zoom up on
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just the T1-weighted sequence.
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You notice there is diffuse bony abnormality.
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Both femurs, ilium, even the vertebral
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bodies, they demonstrate a very heterogeneous
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appearance in their matter, marrow.
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Now, if you look at the marrow, for
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example, uh, in, on the right side, right
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femoral neck, uh, femoral head area.
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And compare it to muscle,
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it's actually quite similar.
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So we were a little stumped, when
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could this just be some funny edema?
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Uh, but it just looked abnormal.
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It just didn't look like, because
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edema shouldn't be patchy like this.
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And it shouldn't cause these
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areas of serpiginous abnormality
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that you see in the femoral head.
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And this is some early signs,
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MR, of avascular necrosis.
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So whatever is happening is clogging up the
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vessels that are feeding these femoral heads.
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The femoral heads are actually quite sensitive
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to decreases in perfusion, so this is
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causing some degree of avascular necrosis,
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and that's what you're seeing over here.
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Similarly, lots of abnormality in the pelvis.
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This person eventually got biopsied,
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and this ended up being leukemia.
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So sometimes leukemia infiltration
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may not quite be dark enough such that
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it's darker than the adjacent muscle.
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So that's one of the caveats, but the
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pattern of such diffuse involvement over
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multiple bones is highly suspicious for
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an infiltrated process such as leukemia.
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I'm just going to show you, uh, for the sake
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of completeness, what the STIR signal showed.
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Again, the STIR signal here shows
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areas of serpiginous, low signal
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corresponding to some avascular necrosis.
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Irregular areas of brightness
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intermixed with dark areas, again
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showing an infiltrative process.
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There may be a small joint effusion bilaterally.
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And once we gave contrast, I think
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it becomes abundantly clear that
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this is just not normal bones.
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Look at the serpiginous areas of
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enhancement, lack of enhancement altogether,
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meaning that there's avascular necrosis.
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Enhancement of the synovium, so that
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joint effusion was a little reactive.
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And also abnormal enhancement of
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the iliac bones and the mottled
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appearance of the vertebral bodies.
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So this is leukemia.
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