Interactive Transcript
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Dr. P here.
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3 00:00:02,400 --> 00:00:06,660 I've got a 66-year-old woman with a mass
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growing on the dorsal aspect of her foot.
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I do not know whether it's
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getting bigger or smaller.
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I have a T1 Spin echo.
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Here's the mass surrounding the extensor hallucis.
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There it is on a T2 spin echo
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without fat suppression.
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It is not white.
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It's not very watery.
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It's more intermediate in signal intensity.
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And then on the right-hand side is the T1 spin
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echo image showing what I would consider an
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obliquely oriented elliptical-shaped mass.
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If I just kind of wrap my pen
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around it right here, I think you
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can see it pretty well right there.
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And then here's the mass in the short axis
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projection, no problem for you to see that.
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Now let's scroll up and down, and you
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can see it goes away, then it comes
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back, and then it goes away again.
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And I think our team generated a very
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reasonable differential diagnosis.
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I'll give you the muscular atrophy.
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I'll give you the osteoarthritis
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of the great toe right now.
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I'll give you the fact that
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the patient has had a distal
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osteotomy, and let's just focus on the mass,
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because that's our purpose here today together.
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So we said, we thought it could be
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a tenosynovial reaction, as might
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occur with, say, RA, with some pannus.
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Totally reasonable, although what's
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unreasonable about that differential
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diagnosis is we didn't see any arthropathy.
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Erosions, juxta-articular
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edema, or pannus anywhere else.
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So that's a little weird.
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So, we chose giant cell tumor of
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tendon sheath as our first choice.
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It has a pretty good signal for that.
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If we go to the more water-weighted image,
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which might allow us with some advantage
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to see some hemosiderin deposition or some
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blooming phenomenon, we see none of that.
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We just see some higher signal intensity,
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which doesn't really help us a lot.
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Now, it would have been nice
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to have a gradient echo image.
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Let's see if we have one somewhere.
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We don't, but here's another very
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heavily water-weighted image.
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And once again, the signal intensity,
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if I blow it up for you, is quite gray.
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So we have these pretty little scans,
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all in a row, and there is no iron,
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there is no hemosiderin deposition.
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So giant cell tumor of tendon sheath,
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while it was the diagnosis that we
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picked, we didn't feel wonderful about it.
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It got biopsied, and the diagnosis
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came back as granuloma annulare.
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Now there are four types of this entity,
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which occurs mostly in children and young adults.
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And this lady is not a child or a young adult.
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So that made it all the more surprising localized,
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generalized perforating and subcutaneous.
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Now some other names that you may or may not
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be familiar with are benign rheumatoid nodule.
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That's kind of confusing.
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Pseudo-rheumatoid nodule.
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I've heard that kicked around
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and palisading granuloma.
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I've heard that.
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Kicked around as well.
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These are usually painless subcutaneous lesions.
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I encounter them in my practice about twice
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a year because I see so many knee MRIs in the
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pre-tibial region and it does like that region.
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Sometimes, these lesions will grow fast.
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Now, I'm not sure if the annular
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word is related to the shape of it.
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In fact, I think it's not.
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But I will say, if you go back and
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look at the T1-weighted image, it does
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have this kind of annular shape to it.
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And that has been my experience
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even with the pre-tibial ones too.
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It's kind of a long, moderately
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long, sessile lesion.
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So the final diagnosis here
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was granuloma annulare.
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The take-home message is that it
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occurs in children and young adults.
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It likes the pre-tibial region.
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This happens to be a freaky
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diagnosis in this case.
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We gave you a reasonable differential diagnosis.
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Dr. P signing out.
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