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Brody's Abscess

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This is a 41-year-old man with ankle pain

0:03

and no other clinical symptomatology.

0:07

It is obvious we have a mass in

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the distal aspect of the ankle.

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On your left is a more proton density,

0:13

non-fat suppressed image, and that'll

0:15

come into play here in a minute.

0:18

In the middle, we've got a water-weighted

0:20

image with excellent fat suppression.

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Here's our mass again.

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And then finally, on the right,

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we have a straight forward T1,

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spin echo, fat-weighted image.

0:31

So, a couple of thoughts for you as you're

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analyzing the case, especially if you're a

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resident, a fellow, or a young attending.

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The first thing you might notice

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is the joint is pretty dry.

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Let's scroll it here a little bit.

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And I'll give you the fact that there's

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a little bit of fluid here, but not much.

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So the fact that the joint is pretty

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dry moves us away from the diagnosis

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of arthropathic cysts, geodes, cystic

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erosions, and that whole family of lesions.

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Another factor that is very noticeable

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is the disease is pretty profound in the

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tibia, but the talus is still standing.

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The talus is unaffected.

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Whatever this thing is has not crossed the joint.

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It has not involved the other side of the joint.

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So if you're going down the road of infection,

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septic arthritis should not be your choice.

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So then we, we look at the lesion and we

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scroll about it and we see it's got one major

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component and maybe one minor component.

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And then our next job is to decide if

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it has a sharp zone of transition or

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not, and for the most part, it does.

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One area of it that is very

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concerning is right here.

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Right there.

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So it's eating the cortex

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a little bit like Pac-Man.

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We don't like that.

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And, as you know, bone end lesions, you

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know, there's a narrow differential diagnosis

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for these, you know, giant cell tumor,

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chondroblastoma, telangiectatic osteogenic

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sarcoma, things related to arthropathy, but

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another one would be intraosseous ganglia.

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The intraosseous ganglia don't

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produce this kind of edema.

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I mean, look at what's going on

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here on the T1 weighted image.

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Gray, white, everywhere.

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It goes all the way up the shaft.

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And then, even on the proton density,

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which is bereft of contrast signal in many

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cases, we still see a little bit of edema.

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So, proton density, not my favorite sequence,

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but here's what it gives you in this case.

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It tells you that this is not fluid.

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Now the T1 does that as well.

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The signal here is equal to muscle, but

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the signal here is nowhere near what you

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would expect simple fluid to look like.

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And that can come in handy in cases

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other than this one, where we already

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know that this is not simple fluid.

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So, is it blood?

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Well, it's not blood, because there's no

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methemoglobin staining, and there's no

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deoxyhemoglobin or hemosiderin low signal

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effect on the water weighted image.

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And a gradient echo image might show

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that to you a little bit better.

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Even though we don't have any known

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risk factors in this case, we're left

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with the diagnosis of an abscess.

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And then we have to decide, within our

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abscess, do we have sequestered bone?

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The answer is no.

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Do we have a sinus tract that is

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lurking towards the periphery?

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Well, not yet, although this thing is pooching

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towards the periphery and sometimes you can

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get a little bit of periosteum and covering,

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soft tissue covering of that sinus tract.

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We don't have that here and it is wanting

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to get into the joint, don't get me

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wrong, it just hasn't quite made it yet.

3:59

Now there is another very useful sign

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in this case that I use in the brain,

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and in the lung, but especially in the brain.

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And I do a fair amount of brain

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imaging, and that is the rim.

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So I'm going to draw some rims for you.

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And so here's a rim, with

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some signal in the middle.

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And I'm going to give you the

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signal in the middle, I'm going to

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make the signal in the middle red.

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And this is my rim, and I call that a thick rim.

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And I'd also say that it's thinner

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over here, and it's thicker over here.

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So it, it's not uniformly the same thickness.

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And if I was really being true to

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form, I'd make this a little bit

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more narrow, and this a little wider.

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In fact, let's do that.

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Let's make it thinner.

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See, it's thinner here, and then all of a

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sudden, it gets a bit thicker over here.

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And abscesses don't do that.

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Tumors do that.

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So when you have variability in the thickness

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of the wall, and some of it is awfully thick

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with this really weird intervening tissue,

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and maybe some high signal in the middle.

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Which might be fluid, it might

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be necrosis, it might be pus.

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When you have this type of wall

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inconsistency, it's usually not an abscess.

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That is a very useful sign.

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So, that would be something like a glioblastoma

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multiforme with necrosis in the brain.

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Whereas, when you look at an abscess,

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you usually have a fairly thin wall.

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And I'm gonna use a different color for my

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abscess just so we can have a little bit of fun.

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Let's go with aquamarine blue.

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And that is about what you'd

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expect to see with your abscess.

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And if you look at the T1-weighted

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image, that's exactly what you get.

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So, in differentiating abscess from some

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of these other cavitary lesions that you're

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going to encounter, both in MSK and in

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neuro, the fact that you have a homogeneous

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thickness of the rim of the cavity is very

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consistent with the diagnosis of abscess.

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Now, I don't mind that there is extensive edema.

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That's absolutely fine for

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the diagnosis of an abscess.

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Now, one other take-home point.

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When you look inside these abscesses, and

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I'm going to use the color brown, because

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it's kind of dastardly finding, and that is,

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you may get some signal inside your abscess.

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And that happens not infrequently.

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And it's not because it's bled.

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It's because you have neutrophils, you have

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phagocytic structures that are inside the

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abscess, lots of them, and what are they making?

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They're making peroxidases.

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And what do peroxidases do?

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They drive down the signal

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intensity on pulsing sequences.

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Especially T2, especially gradient echo,

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and it gets a little bit confusing.

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You say, well, it's pus, it's

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fluid, it should be white.

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Well, the answer is no, it's not always white

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because you get the susceptibility phenomenon

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from the collection of neutrophils that give you

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peroxidases that produce low signal intensity

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due to their contrast, relaxivity effect.

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So the take-home message here

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is, this is a homogeneous lesion.

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This is a homogeneous abscess.

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It's got that nice, consistent rim that

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you see best on the T1-weighted image.

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And the rim is thin all the way

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around, which it usually is.

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In tumors, the rim is thick.

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And although it didn't occur in this

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case, sometimes you get heterogeneity

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inside the abscess for reasons mentioned,

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especially those intense collections

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of phagocytic cells like neutrophils.

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Dr. P signing off.

Report

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MSK

MRI

Infectious

Foot & Ankle

Bone & Soft Tissues

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