Interactive Transcript
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Dr. P here.
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3 00:00:01,930 --> 00:00:07,960 I've got an 18-year-old female who has a heel
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abnormality, and five years prior to this study
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had an implanted foreign body, which was removed.
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So the question that has been posited
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to us is, what is this thing in the
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heel pad on the sagittal T2 PD image?
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The TE was 60, the TR was about 3,000.
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On your right is the sagittal
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straight-up T1 spin echo.
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And on your left is an axial, just to roll it
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along, an axial T2 nonfat-suppressed image.
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So I gave you a porridge, a soup,
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of different signal intensities.
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Something very heavily water-weighted,
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something somewhat water-weighted,
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and something that is fat-weighted.
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Then you take a look at this
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mass and say, okay, where is it?
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It's in the heel pad.
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That narrows the differential
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diagnosis quite a bit.
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For instance, and you don't get
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ganglion pseudocysts of the heel pad.
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The next thing you do is you look at it and you
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say, well, it's multilobulated or multiloculated.
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Kind of like ganglion cysts might
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be, except it's in an awful location.
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So you have to think about
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another potential diagnosis.
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Then the other factors that play into
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this are, what's the zone of transition?
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Is it pretty tight or is it pretty loose?
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You know, you look at the T1-weighted
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image. There's some ill-defined, wax
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on, wax off signal around it, but it's
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pretty well-concentrated to this area.
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It's not crossing any boundaries.
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It's not invading anything.
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It's not exophytic.
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These are all things you need to think about.
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It is not attached to a tendon or to a joint.
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So that really winnows down
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the differential diagnosis.
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So the types of things that should
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go through your head are epidermoid,
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implantation, and inclusion cysts.
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They tend to be a little bit
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loculated, but not so much like this.
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These almost look like little clusters of grapes.
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And you don't see that very
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often with an epidermoid.
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Granted, it can occur.
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Certainly other cystic lesions
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like a cystic schwannoma.
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There really isn't any nerve there, so a cystic
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tumor would be an unlikely consideration.
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We've already mentioned ganglia don't
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occur in the heel pad, even though
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the signal is not inconsistent.
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But when you go to the axial T2-weighted
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image, some of you are wondering, with
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these lobulated finger-like masses, that,
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by the way, have some internal architecture
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and signal inside them with septa.
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What is this?
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Is that the residua or the remains of
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the so-called five-year-old foreign body?
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And the answer is, no, there's more of them.
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There's another one here.
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And if you keep looking, maybe
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there's another one here.
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And eventually, you arrive at the correct
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diagnosis, which is that of a hemangioma.
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There's a whole classification of hemangiomas.
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Not gonna go through that
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classification right now.
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But, the diagnosis of hemangioma is highly
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likely with the presence of phleboliths.
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This sort of bowl of grapes or cluster of
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little grapes or seedlets within the heel.
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It likes the heel pad.
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Sometimes it'll involve the subcutaneous space.
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As it does, it's gray in signal,
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similar to muscle, and bright on T2.
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It does have some internal signal in it
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because it has debris or blood inside it.
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Not too dissimilar from lymphangioma,
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which, by the way, don't occur here.
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And I'll share one anecdote with you.
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When I was a young attending, a woman was in the
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stirrups delivering, and right after the delivery,
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she had a giant swollen red and purple heel.
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Which she then ascribed to a
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trauma from the OB-GYN surgeon.
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And we went and did an MRI on her to
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visualize this traumatic hematoma.
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And what we saw was nothing more than a giant
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hemangioma that had responded hormonally to
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the delivery and had grown within a matter of
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hours, creating this false red and purple mass.
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It had absolutely nothing to do with the patient.
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Uh, with what the surgeon did,
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it was completely atraumatic.
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And you can confirm, if you have any
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question, the diagnosis of a hemangioma, or
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a venous malformation, or a lymphangioma,
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by going to ultrasound with Doppler analysis
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looking at arterial and venous flow.
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With that, let's move on.
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Dr. P out.
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