Interactive Transcript
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Well, we're about an hour into this course and all
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we've done is go through the anatomy.
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But this is a mastery course after all.
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So you've learned quite a bit of the anatomy of the
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major salivary glands, those including the parotid,
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the submandibular and the sublingual glands,
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as well as the minor salivary gland tissue.
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Let's talk very briefly about scan sequences
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and how we actually image it.
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I've pointed out a few of these cases thus far
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in which we've looked at the technique.
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Now, at my institution at Johns Hopkins,
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we collect and display all of the thin
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section images of multidetector CT.
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So in our analysis of the head and neck region
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or the salivary gland region,
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we will obtain 0.6 millimeter thick slices,
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and we get the whole body of the anatomy at
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0.6 millimeter slices available to us.
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That usually runs about 700 images.
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However, the technologists then reconstruct those images
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in 3 millimeter bytes that we can
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look at for a quick overview.
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So if the 3 millimeters are not of sufficient
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detail, we go to those thin section raw data,
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0.6 millimeter thick slices.
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With those 0.6 millimeter slices,
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obviously, we can create beautiful coronal
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and sagittal reconstructions ourselves.
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However, the technologist provide to us multiplanar
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reconstructions in the coronal and sagittal plane
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at the 3 millimeter thick reconstructions.
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So you get the axial, coronal and sagittal.
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When do we need contrast?
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So if the question is about calcifications
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and calculi,
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you really don't need contrast-enhanced images.
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We can just use non-contrast CT scans to identify
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calcifications and calculi.
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However, if we're looking at whether or not
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the gland is inflamed,
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it's useful to have post-contrast scans that can be
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compared with the pre-contrast scans and can be
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compared side to side to see whether the gland is
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enhancing more on the one side, the pathologic side
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versus the non-pathologic side to suggest that there
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is indeed inflammation of the gland.
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When we are looking for neoplasms,
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however, with CT scan,
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we are obviously giving contrast
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enhancement and in that situation
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we do not do pre-contrast,
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non-contrast imaging.
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We go straight to the contrast-enhanced CT scan
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with the typical sort of venous phase imaging,
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which allows both the
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anatomy of the arteries and the
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veins to be identified,
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as well as to see whether the neoplasm
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imbibes any contrast itself.
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And that also is helpful for inflammatory lesions
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where we're looking for abscesses,
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for example.
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I showed an example of CT sialography.
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I'll do a mea culpa.
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I haven't done sialography in probably 10 years
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because the CT and the MRI scans usually
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solve the questions themselves.
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So we don't do CT sialography except
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in exceptional cases nowadays.
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Let's move to MR of the salivary glands.
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Well,
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since we are doing such thin sections with CT scan,
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there has become a competition, if you will,
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for higher resolution on our MR studies.
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So, you probably are doing 3-5 millimeter
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thick sections for your neck MRI studies routinely.
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However, at Johns Hopkins,
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we will often include thin
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section 0.6 millimetre MR images.
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Why? Because we have to compete with CT, right?
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We want to have as good a resolution as with CT.
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In order to achieve those 0.6 mm thick sections,
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you have to do thin section
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CISS or VIBE imaging.
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These are Siemens terms
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for the constructive interference in the steady state.
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And I've forgotten VIBE,
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but it's T1-weighted sequences,
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and these are also called FIESTA on
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some of the other manufacturers,
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and MP RAGE or MP GSBR for the VIBE option.
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So that allows us to get submillimeter thick sections.
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Routinely, these are your images,
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3 mm thick T1-weighted.
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You need good quality fat-suppressed
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T2-weighted imaging.
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That usually requires inversion recovery sequences,
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either fast spin-echo or STIR sequences with good fat
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suppression and post-gad, T1-weighted scans.
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These may also be inversion recovery.
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Some people do in-phase,
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out-of-phase, Dixon type, post-gad scans
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with 3 mm thick sections.
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You can just do pre-imposed VIBE and
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get thin section images.
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Again, the value of the VIBE imaging and the CISS imaging is
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that you could do reconstructions in the sagittal and
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coronal planes that are very high-quality.
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MR sialography does not require
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contrast injection. In this situation,
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it's a very highly T2-weighted scan,
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very much like a CISS sequence with suppression of
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the tissue around, in which case you can see
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the ductal system very nicely.
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MR sialography has been stolen, if you will, from MR
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cholangiopancreatography.
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So this is basically the same pulse sequence
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that you do for your MRCP.
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You're going to apply to the salivary glands
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in order to see ductal pathology.
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It's pretty uncommon that we do MR sialography.
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That's usually for patients who have chronic sialadenitis ,
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often patients who have, for example,
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Sjogren's syndrome or whatnot.
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So not a frequently utilized application for MRI.
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We have embraced diffusion-weighted
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imaging in the salivary glands.
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Low ADC,
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manifested as bright signal in the DWI sequence,
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is commonly associated with parotid malignancies.
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There is some overlap with Warthin's tumor, however,
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but we routinely now do DWI.
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It also sometimes will be helpful for
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you in looking at lymphadenopathy.
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If we see lymph nodes who have...
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which have reduced ADC,
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we're more likely to suggest that they are metastatic
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lymph nodes than those who have high ADC and are,
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and are more likely to be inflammatory.
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Perfusion-weighted imaging has been advocated in
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academic circles also to distinguish benign versus
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malignant neoplasms in the parotid gland,
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predominantly or inflammatory lesions
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from neoplastic lesions.
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And I'll demonstrate some of the
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findings on that as well.
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