Interactive Transcript
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Dr. P here.
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3 00:00:01,640 --> 00:00:05,550 This is a 53-year-old male with diffuse
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swelling and erythema, a warm foot, and we've
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got a sagittal, heavily water-weighted image
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on the far left, the so-called lateral view,
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and then a sagittal T1 fat-weighted image in
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the center, and then on the far right, another
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heavily water-weighted image in a long axis
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axial-type projection.
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So it's obvious to many of you
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that the entire foot is swollen.
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Look at this laminar pattern
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of interstitial edema.
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Just about everywhere.
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You've got some tendons interspersed
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there, and then you look a little bit more
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deeply, you see the same phenomenon here.
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Here's a couple blood vessels
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working their way around, and then you look in
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the superficial soft tissues, and this patient did
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have, as you can see on the far right, a focal
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ulceration along the lateral aspect of the foot.
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So that is of some concern.
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And then when we get into these areas right
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here, you know, you'd like to think they're
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veins, but you can't hook them all up.
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And that's one of your jobs is to follow
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them around and make sure they're nerves
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or veins or fascia layers or maybe
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just fat that's been fat suppressed.
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And you have to go back and
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forth to kind of figure that out.
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And when you go over here and you look inside
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this ulcer, if nothing else, if you don't believe
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that any of these areas could be gas, and that
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is an essential thing to rule out in a patient
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who has fasciitis or myofasciitis, then,
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you know, you can always go to, you know, say,
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CT or some other modality if you're unsure.
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So we're scrolling around.
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The T1 is not particularly revealing as it usually
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isn't for air or gas unless it's a lot of it.
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When we go to the water-weighted image,
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these are not structures that are linear.
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These are not structures
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that are connected to veins.
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So, they look like little tiny dots of
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hypointensity, and you must at least
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be very worried about gas bubbles.
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So then, you know, you can justifiably get a CT.
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And a CT was done.
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There's no shame whatsoever in confirming or
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corroborating the diagnosis of air or gas with CT.
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And indeed, it's obvious, we do have air or gas.
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So CT doesn't do as well at showing abscesses,
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the myositis, the laminar fasciitis that's
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occurred, but it does better, it does a very good job
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at picking up air or gas.
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So let's talk a little bit about this
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entity of flesh-eating bacterial infection
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that is caused by group A Streptococcus.
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Yes, you can get Clostridium.
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Yes, you can get other organisms involved,
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especially when there's gas.
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It's a strange thing.
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It doesn't take a lot of trauma. You know, I've
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seen it happen with somebody that just got a
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little abrasion from brushing their arm against
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a rock while on a trip, a rafting
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trip in Georgia. I've seen it many, many times
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with innocuous injuries. Somebody that got
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stuck with a toothpick and that's it.
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I've seen it as a result of an infected
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chickenpox, which sounds kind
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of crazy, but there's a name for that.
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I'll tell you in a minute.
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So trauma plus often, not always, but often some
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degree of immunosuppression: diabetes, alcoholism,
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chronic renal failure, steroids, drug use, HIV.
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Now, the chickenpox type, where you get it
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with chickenpox, is called varicella gangrenosa.
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That's a rarity, that's just a
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piece of trivia to win a beer at a bar.
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But toxic shock syndrome occurs about
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10% of the time in this entity.
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Now typically on physical exam, you, you might
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see crepitus or feel crepitus, not see it.
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Feel it or you might not.
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You might see purplish discoloration of
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the skin that's dusky or patchy.
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You might not.
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You might see some of the cardinal
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lab features of necrotizing fasciitis.
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One of which is often not quoted
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or recognized, hyponatremia.
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You may also see an elevated BUN and the
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white count may or may not be elevated.
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Typically, there's deep laminar enhancement within
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the interstitium of the muscle, but you know what?
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You can see that with just a straightforward
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myositis, and you can see it with, you know,
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other forms of myositis, including those
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related to immune types of disorders.
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The differential diagnosis in a case like
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this is going to be cellulitis, but that's
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disease here in the subcutaneous region.
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Once you get into the muscle,
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now you're into myofasciitis.
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You can get simple pyomyositis,
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in which you get an abscess in the
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muscle without necrotizing fasciitis.
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You can get lymphangitis.
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You can get idiopathic inflammatory myositis.
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You know, some of the other important differential
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diagnoses, especially when out of the foot,
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but also in the foot, include ischemia, compartment
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syndrome, rhabdomyolysis with myoglobinuria.
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So a case like this, you want to
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get a urine myoglobin, you want to check
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the CPK, you want to check the aldolase,
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you probably want to check the ALK Phos, and
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some other key measurements of myonecrosis.
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Lymphedema is usually more superficial.
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126 00:05:31,915 --> 00:05:34,305 It's usually not as deep within
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the interstitium of the muscle.
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And the same thing is true of venoedema
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or venous edema from venous obstruction.
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The fluid tends to congregate around the venous
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structures like this, which is not happening here.
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You know, it's just randomly
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going from proximal to distal.
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And finally, you can get some inflamed, ruptured,
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capsulocinovial cysts that dissect into the foot.
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And I've seen that happen.
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And I've also seen primary
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thrombophlebitis in one of my good friends
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occur in the foot and look a little
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scary with some edema in the deep
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aspect of the muscular tissue.
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So this is necrotizing fasciitis.
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I know you're all familiar with it and
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that it can occur in various other parts
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of the body, especially in the perineum,
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where it can be particularly difficult
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to manage and particularly heinous.
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It's a case that sometimes presents
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to the ER and everybody is scrambling.
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Necrotizing fasciitis.
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Dr. P out.
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