Interactive Transcript
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Here we have a teenager with foot pain.
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Uh, we did plain films, uh, she revealed
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nothing, and now we are getting MRIs to see if
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there's, if we can find anything on the MRI.
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And I'm showing you this case to
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demonstrate that you can have patchy
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bone marrow signal and still be normal.
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And giving you just a little idea of what
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normal bone marrow signal looks like, uh, and
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not how to confuse it with abnormal signal.
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So let's just go through this.
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Uh, some of the images, and I think it's
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most constructive to look at it on a
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fat-suppressed, fluid-sensitive sequence.
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As you notice, first of all, the metaphysis
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here has the trilaminar appearance.
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We've got the true physis
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here, which is cartilage.
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The dark area is the zone of provisional
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calcification, and the brighter
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area above that, which is part of
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the metaphysis, is the spongiosa.
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This is where the blood vessels are very
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rich, and a lot of humeral factors come in.
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Okay.
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In addition to that, you notice the metaphysis
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has sort of a blush type of appearance.
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It's like somebody's taken
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a paintbrush and swiped up.
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There's no clear demarcation of where
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the bright area ends and the darker
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area of the fatty marrow begins.
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So that's a very typical appearance
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of a pediatric metaphysis.
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If you can take a pencil and draw a line
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between the border of the dark area and
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the bright area, then that is abnormal.
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You don't want to be able
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to do that in the marrow.
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You want the slight brushed type of appearance.
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A similar concept can be applied to what we
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see in the tarsal bones, including talus and
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the calcaneus and the various cuneiforms.
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As I look through this, I see these
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patchy areas of bright signal.
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You see one over here.
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It almost looks like central edema
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with spider-like protuberances
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or extensions from the center.
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Again, nothing I can take a pencil and draw
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around with a clear demarcation separating
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the very dark areas from the brighter areas.
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That is normal residual hematopoietic
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marrow or responses to normal
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stress in the pediatric population.
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There's a little debate about what that is
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exactly, but in general, that seems to be one
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of the two things that people think it is.
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And it can be a combination of both.
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You see another sort of blush type over here,
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another blush high signal over here, and it can
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be a little bit more well-defined, like here.
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But again, it's not like I can take a
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pencil and really make a nice cutout.
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Typically, they're located within
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sort of the body of the marrow.
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Typically, they don't occur just under
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the cartilage or just
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under the cortical surface.
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If you start to see that, then you begin to
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worry maybe this is not just simple marrow.
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Maybe it's an osteochondral
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lesion that's presenting itself.
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And as the more you look, the more you'll find.
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Again, you see some here in the tarsal bones.
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As we go further, we see more
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high signal here and here.
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So that's very, very typical.
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It's not just the foot.
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You'll see it in the carpal bones a lot too.
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And even sometimes in the distal long
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extremities like the tibia and fibula.
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So, please don't confuse that
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with abnormal bone marrow.
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