Interactive Transcript
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Hi, Dr. P here with a 56-year-old man
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3 00:00:05,000 --> 00:00:08,000 with an enlarging mass in the great toe.
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It's a coronal T2, non-fat suppressed.
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A sagittal, simple T1.
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And somebody reported this as a
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cystic mass, and I can see why.
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It's very bright on the water-weighted image,
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but lots of things are.
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And just like an ultrasound when
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you have criteria for a cyst,
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good through transmission, hypoechogenicity,
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homogeneity, usually oval or round in shape, etc.
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On MR, you have criteria too, and one of those
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criteria is that the signal is water-like,
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matches water on the T2-weighted image, and on
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the T1-weighted image, it matches water again.
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Water-like urine, like signal in the bladder.
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If we just look here, and maybe we shrink
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down a little bit, you'll see that the
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signal of muscle is about the same,
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maybe even a little lower than our mass.
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So this does not meet the criteria
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of simple fluid or a simple cyst.
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It's got to be a proteinaceous
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water signal intensity mass.
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Now a couple of descriptors about this mass.
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It's serpiginous.
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It's septated.
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And in some respects, that makes you
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think a little bit about a hemangioma.
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Although the little lobules
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of hemangioma are smaller.
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So let's go through a differential diagnosis here.
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And let me bring down the sagittal T2 now,
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and show you the architecture of this mass,
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which is similar to the long-axis view.
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And the thing that I liked about this mass as
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a first choice was epidermoid, because of its
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size and its location, implantation epidermoid.
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Epidermoids are inclusion lesions,
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And what else might we consider here?
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Well, somebody mentioned a tenosynovial cyst
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in the report, and if you bring down the
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T2-weighted image, there is some tenosynovial
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fluid, but it is not communicating with our
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mass, nor is our mass tubular like a tenosynovial
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cyst, so I don't like that diagnosis.
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Another water signal type mass that's
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not simple water, that would have this
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signal characteristic, is a myxoma.
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So it would be an awfully odd location
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for a myxoma or the myxomatous family of
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tumors and the only way to exclude that as a
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possibility would be to inject this patient
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and look for the absence of enhancement.
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Then another thought would be a glomus tumor.
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They like to occur in the nail bed
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but I have seen them in the tuft
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portion of the finger and the toe.
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I have never seen one this big.
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I have never seen one with
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this shape and architecture.
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So I don't like glomus tumor, nor was
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the history supportive of that diagnosis.
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What about a capsular cyst?
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Now that would be a strong consideration here.
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But in order to have a capsular
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cyst, let's look at the capsule.
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And let's go to the sagittal.
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There's only a little bit of fluid in the capsule,
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and I cannot see this mass
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communicating with the capsule.
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And the main difference between a capsular cyst
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and a ganglion cyst, which is a consideration
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here, is a capsular cyst is lined by epithelium.
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A ganglion cyst is lined by fibrous tissue.
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A ganglion cyst has an obvious macroscopic
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communication to a fluid-filled joint.
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A ganglion, not so much.
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There might be a microscopic
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communication, but not a macroscopic
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one and usually the joint is dry.
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So ganglion pseudocyst would be a consideration
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along with epidermoidoma or inclusion cyst.
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Another good consideration
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would be cystic schwannoma.
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You're near the neurovascular bundle.
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It's a little big for that diagnosis.
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The shape is a little weird.
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The only way you're going to exclude it
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is with a contrast injection,
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although the patient should report some neurologic
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symptoms, which this patient did not.
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Just simply a slow-growing mass.
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So, I'm not keen on the
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diagnosis of cystic schwannoma.
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And finally, there's varix.
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Now, if you're going to make the diagnosis of a varix,
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and there are veins in this location,
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you better be able to connect this with a vein.
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And I can't connect it with any tubular
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longitudinal structure that is reminiscent
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of a vein or an artery for that matter.
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But an artery wouldn't play
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into the diagnosis here.
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So my choices would be epidermoidoma
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and ganglion pseudocyst.
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They did not bring the patient back for injection.
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It turned out to be a ganglion pseudocyst.
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This is one of the bigger ones that I've seen.
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It is not a common location.
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Ganglion cysts can be very septated,
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but they do not, because they're
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pseudocysts surrounded by fibrous tissue,
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they do not contain bodies.
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They do not contain metaplasia.
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They do not contain pieces of chondral tissue.
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So for the most part, the internal constituents
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of a ganglion pseudocyst are clean.
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It may have a very small microscopic tail.
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It goes to, say, the joint, or goes to a tendon.
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The tail is important in the diagnosis.
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I'm not sure I see a great tail
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here in this particular instance.
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And frankly, ganglion cyst was my
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second choice, not my first choice.
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But that is the final diagnosis.
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Giant ganglion pseudocyst of the great toe.
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Let's move on, shall we?
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Dr. P. out.
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