Interactive Transcript
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Dr. P here, we've got an 80-year-old man with a
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3 00:00:05,340 --> 00:00:09,920 "lump" in the undersurface of his foot.
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Let's start scrolling, but I think the
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take-home message on this case is the
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specificity of the diagnosis and the signals
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that help you come to that conclusion.
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On the left, T1-weighted image, simple
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fat-weighted, and we have run into a blob.
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It looks a little bit like a peanut.
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Or maybe even a snowman. You know, there's
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the head of the snowman and there's
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the base of the snowman right there.
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And then we go to the simple
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T2 spin echo image right there.
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And there's no fat suppression there, so that
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gives you an idea of the signal of this blob.
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It's got some low signal and then towards
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the center of it, even though it's
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kind of squished together between the
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metatarsals, between M3 and M4, you've
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got some high signal in the middle there.
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Then we go over to the proton density
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fat suppression, in which everything
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is almost always hyperintense.
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And yet, this is a little hyper-
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intense, but not overwhelmingly so.
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It doesn't look like, say, pure water.
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If you look up high in that area that was high
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on T2, it's still high, but not that high.
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And then around it, certainly the signal
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intensity is a mixture of intermediate and high,
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and high-ish signal intensity,
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but certainly not fluid.
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So that's extremely helpful in
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generating the differential diagnosis.
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Because when you're between the metatarsals,
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what you have to think about is what lives there?
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Nerves?
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Bursa?
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Vessels.
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So is this vascular?
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Probably not.
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There's no methemoglobin here, there's
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no deoxyhemoglobin anywhere, it doesn't
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look like blood, and it certainly doesn't
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look like a varix, which will have some
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pooling or a blood-fluid level inside it.
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And besides, I've probably seen two in 35 years.
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So, that's not particularly common.
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That's a long shot.
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Then you've got bursitis.
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That is very common.
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In fact, most people over the age of 50,
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especially women that are high-heel wearers, will
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have intermetatarsal bursitis and capsulitis.
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But the key to the diagnosis of bursitis
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is the signal is overwhelmingly fluid-like.
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That is not the case here.
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There's a little fluid-like signal here, but it's
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not really pure fluid, and there isn't much of it.
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So that really leaves you with one
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conclusion, and that is the favored
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diagnosis, which is known as Morton's neuroma.
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Now, what is a Morton's neuroma?
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It is not a neuroma in the
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sense that it's not a neoplasm.
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We've got schwannoma, we've got neurofibroma,
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neurofibrosarcoma, and there are some other
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really weird neural tumors that I won't
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bore you with right now, but the diagnosis
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of Morton's neuroma is a reactive one.
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You're talking about perineural fibrosis with
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disorganization of the neural structures.
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They undergo some liquefaction, and so you may see
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some central areas of low signal intensity due to
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nerve degeneration and some inflammatory tissue,
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but then the bulk of the inflammatory tissue
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in the periphery is more fibrous, more dark.
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Look at that blob, and look
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at how dark and fibrous it is.
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It looks almost collagenous, like some of those
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plantar fibromas or fibromatosis that you've seen.
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You've got these funny-looking septa
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right here, and it gets fairly large.
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Now let's go to the post-contrast T1, and when we
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look at the post-contrast images, in the middle,
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you've got the neural tissues with that T1.
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liquefaction phenomena of disorganized
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neural cells and neural structures.
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And then the tissue that is fibrotic,
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the perineurofibrosis, is inflammatory.
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Because this is a friction event, much like you
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have a friction event when you have carpal tunnel
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syndrome, or you have tarsal tunnel syndrome.
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This is one of the entrapment neuropathies.
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Now, what could cause this?
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Well, you put your feet in some
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tight-fitting shoes with pointy toes, and
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you squish the metatarsals and the digits
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together, and then they start to rub and rub,
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and as they do so, they induce this phenomenon.
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So, it is more common in women.
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It likes M3 in particular.
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It occurs much less frequently in
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M1, M2 because of the nerve anatomy.
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Between M3 and M4, two nerves kind of meet
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whereas between M1 and M2 you only have
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one nerve coursing through that area.
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So I have seen them there, but it's not common,
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and it's also quite uncommon between M4 and M5.
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The Morton's neuroma.
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Perineural fibrosis as a reactive phenomenon.
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I use size as an important
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criteria to say Morton's neuroma.
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And that size number is between six and
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eight millimeters in either transverse or
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dorsal and ventral, uh, or plantar direction.
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If it's less than that or ill-defined, then I
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simply call it, uh, perineurofibrosis or PNF
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to drive folks away from trying to excise it.
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Now if you look carefully on this
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case, there is something brewing very
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quietly between M2 and M3 right there.
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I'm going to blow it up a little bit
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for you so you can see it better.
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It enhances very little, if at all.
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It's slightly globular.
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It doesn't meet that six-millimeter criteria
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or eight-millimeter criteria, six to eight.
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And therefore I'd say PNF, perineurofibrosis M2
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M3 and giant Morton's neuroma between M3 and M4.
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Dr. P. out.
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