Interactive Transcript
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This was a patient who had a known parotid mass by palpation.
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The protocol that was used for this case was our high-resolution
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skull-based protocol to evaluate the parotid mass.
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So that means that there is not
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wide field of view or lengthy cavernous science down to the
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thoracic inlet sequence being performed for the known mass.
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Instead, we are doing our high-resolution MR sequences.
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So I will start with the T1-weighted sequence.
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So this is 0.9 millimeters.
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So again, sub-millimeter thick slices to allow us
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to have multiplanar reconstructions
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for the evaluation of a parotid mass
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or parotid pathology of any type.
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T1-weighted scans are the best at identifying the pathology,
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seeing it amidst the brighter signal intensity parotid tissue.
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So I always go with the T1-weighted sequence
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first and then I characterize it,
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the lesion with the T2-weighted and
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the diffusion and the post-gad.
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So my go-to sequence for identifying whether or not there's
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a pathology is going to be a T1-weighted sequence.
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So in this case,
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it's pretty easy to compare the right side from the left side.
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On the left side, we have our normal anatomy with the vein,
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the retromandibular vein, and we have the parotid tissue.
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And we would apply the stylomandibular tunnel to identify
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the deep lobe of the parotid gland versus the superficial lobe.
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This is probably the styloid process right here, actually.
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So deep versus superficial.
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I don't normally see the facial nerve.
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The thing that we usually look at that may show linearity within
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the gland that you might suggest might be the facial
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nerve is most kind, in most cases, just ductal.
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So, for example,
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this kind of courses the way the facial nerve would course.
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But this is just ductal anatomy rather
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than facial nerve anatomy.
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It doesn't go all the way into the stylomastoid frame in here.
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So this is the normal side, and we have the bright superficial
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fat, we have the masseter muscle, we have the mandible.
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So we're comfortable with this anatomy.
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Here we have pathology.
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So the parotid gland brighter tissue is seen here, and within
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it, we have a mass which is kind of multilobulated.
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Here is our styloid process.
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Here is the mandible. If we draw our line of the quote,
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unquote styromandibular tunnel.
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So I should say that the stylomandibular tunnel is not an actual
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structure. It's just the plane that we're referring to.
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We would say that there's a portion of it which
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goes to the deep portion of the parotid gland.
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Here's more of the deep tissue of the parotid gland.
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Okay, so this is the mastoid tip.
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This is the styloid process.
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And even here,
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you can see a piece of the tissue of the tumor
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in the deep portion of the parotid gland.
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Why is that important? Well, for the most part,
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if it's a superficial lesion,
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the dissection of the facial nerve still will occur,
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but the lesion is removed quite easily and readily
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with a superficial parotidectomy.
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Once you have portions that are going into the deep portion of
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the parotid gland, first off, the facial nerve may be involved,
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but also it's usually more of a cervical incision,
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and you're more likely to have to sacrifice the facial nerve.
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Okay, so here is our mass,
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and it's predominantly in the superficial
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portion of the parotid gland.
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A little bit of it comes over top of the masseter muscle.
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So I identify the lesion on the T1-weighted scan.
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I next look at the lesion on the T2-weighted scan.
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Here is our T2-weighted scan.
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As you can see,
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we're starting sort of in the mid portion of the brain,
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and we end down here at the tail of the parotid gland.
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And then we include
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the lower portion of the neck.
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These are not high-resolution imaging.
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As you can see, this is four-millimeter thick slices.
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So this is our STIR sequence, our T2-weighted STIR sequence.
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You note that we have pretty good fat suppression throughout.
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And with this sequence,
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we're seeing lymph nodes on the left side,
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but on the right side, we are seeing this mass,
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which has somewhat heterogeneous signal intensity to it.
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Now, if I'm just looking at this bright area here
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that is typical of a pleomorphic adenoma,
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it kind of lights up very brightly
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on the T2-weighted sequence.
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This portion I'm a little bit more concerned about
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because it's intermediate in signal intensity.
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And we'll talk about that in just a moment.
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But this appearance is typical of a pleomorphic adenoma.
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So my thought process is this is most likely a pleomorphic
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adenoma, but I'm concerned about this darker tissue.
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Why am I concerned about the darker tissue?
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Well, if you remember the 80% rule,
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it was that 80% of pleomorphic adenomas remain benign.
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20% of pleomorphic adenomas over the course of long-term
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follow-up show malignant degeneration in some.
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Thing that's called carcinoma ex pleomorphic adenoma.
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So it's malignant degeneration of a pleomorphic adenoma.
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And anytime you see something that's dark or intermediate
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in signal intensity in the parotid gland,
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you better think about the possibility of malignancy.
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So let's move to the next sequence.
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The next sequence I would look at is the diffusion-weighted
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imaging. The diffusion-weighted imaging, as I mentioned,
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helps us to analyze whether or not a tumor
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is likely to be benign or malignant.
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In this case, the signal intensity is bright, intermediate.
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It's not dark.
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It's not as dark as, for example, the cerebellum.
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Let's look at the ADC map.
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This is the ADC map.
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And we notice that there's a difference between that deeper
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portion of the mass from the component that had darker
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signal intensity on T2-weighted imaging.
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This, again,
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would be something that would lead us to be concerned about the
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possibility of malignant degeneration
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of the pleomorphic adenoma.
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Finally, we'll look at the CIS image.
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So the CIS image, as I mentioned, 0.7 millimeter thick slices,
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so submillimeter thick slices.
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This is predominantly utilized for the anatomy and for
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identifying small lesions. But it can also, in the right hands,
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be used to try to identify the facial nerve and the
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relationship of the tumor to the facial nerve.
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In this case, you see that CIS imaging,
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although it's T2 weighting,
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it has a different spectrum,
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grayscale than the traditional STIR imaging.
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All tumors, whether they're benign or malignant,
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tend to be this intermediate dark on the CIS imaging.
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So you really need the STIR to characterize it on T2-weighted
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imaging because CIS is not exactly T2 weighting.
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But we can see the lobularity of the lesion.
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We can look for the facial nerve in this case
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if we continue superficially and try to identify.
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Here is the stylomastoid frame.
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And I'm really not identifying the facial nerve on this case.
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Here, again, can't really identify the facial nerve from
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these 0.7 millimeter thick slices.
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We could do very nice multiplanar reconstructions.
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Let's look at the post-gad.
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Now, the post-gad, we know that pleomorphic adenomas, by and large,
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enhance, and usually they enhance relatively avidly.
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In this case,
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we have the very avid portion of the pleomorphic adenoma and we
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have this portion that is not enhancing in the traditional way
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corresponding to that darker area on T2 and the area of lower
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ADC raising the possibility of malignant degeneration.
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On this sequence,
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we are still not able to identify the facial nerve.
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I want to point out that that little slab
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of tissue that we were worried about
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going into the deep portion of the parotid gland is not enhancing
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or is identified on the Vibe or the CIS imaging.
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There's a small component right here
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that would be in that deep portion on the CIS.
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Let me just try to see where that is here.
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Not as well identified, maybe this little enhancing portion.
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And then we will often do the post-gad CIS imaging again to
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better characterize the anatomy as well as to characterize
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the tumor.
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But as you can see,
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the vast majority of this tumor is in the superficial portion.
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So, in summary,
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the analysis of this case would be that although there are
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components that are typical of a pleomorphic adenoma being well
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defined and bright on T2 and showing
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consistent contrast enhancement,
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there is a portion which is intermediate in signal intensity
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both on the T2-weighted sequence as well as the
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post-gad sequences that shows reduced ADC,
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which is worrisome for malignant degeneration
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of a pleomorphic adenoma.
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