Interactive Transcript
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Welcome to MRI online's discussion of pituitary
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protocols. I'm here with my partner, Dr.
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Malcolm Schupack. I'm the younger one,
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he's the smarter one.
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Let's take a look at the pituitary blood supply.
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We've got a sagittal view of the pituitary gland.
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And let's look at the inferior hypothalamic artery,
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which is coming in from the back.
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And it's going to provide the supply to
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the posterior aspect of the gland,
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which consists of the median eminence,
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the infundibulum and the pars nervosa.
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Now, the front of the gland receives its supply
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from the superior hypothalamic artery,
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which comes in anterosuperiorly,
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and it comes in mostly in the hypothalamic region.
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And then a portal plexus of vessels descends to
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supply the anterior gland, which, by the way,
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consists of a pars tuberalis,
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which is a little bump at the base of the stalk.
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And then the rest of this anterior gland consists of
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the pars distalis or the anterior pituitary gland,
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which I'm coloring in here.
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So I've got inferior hypothalamic artery in the back,
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superior hypothalamic artery in the front,
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descending as a portal plexus.
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Now, to understand how to image the gland,
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of course you want coronal imaging.
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You want T1 and T2 imaging to
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assess large lesions in the gland.
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But when you're searching for microadenomas,
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you want to look at the Turkish saddle,
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which is the pituitary fossa region,
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and we look at the gland,
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which will make aquamarine blue here.
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We'll color it in.
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And we want something that's pretty dynamic.
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And what I mean by that is we want to look at the flow
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into the gland in less than 30 to 45 seconds,
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because if you wait too long,
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you could miss a microadenoma.
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So a microadenoma is often off to the side,
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a little bit in the wings,
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because that's where the prolactin cells are located,
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a little bit off midline.
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And in the middle of the gland,
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you're going to have something called
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the vascular pituitary tuft,
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and you're going to look for displacement
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of that tuft to one side or the other.
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Now, to get this dynamic effect optimally,
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you want fast, three-dimensional imaging,
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much like you do in the prostate gland using
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a dynamic injection of gadolinium,
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so that you're getting an image about
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every 15 or 20 seconds over say,
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a half centimeter or 1 cm distance of the gland,
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so that you might be imaging the gland at, say,
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ten to 15 seconds, and then 15 to 30 seconds,
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and then 30 to 45 seconds,
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and then finally 45 to 60 seconds.
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Now, if you do that,
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you're going to see the microadenoma as a cold object
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and the rest of the gland will be warming up or
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enhancing. Then you might get a delayed image.
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And that delayed image could be done with 3D,
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or it could be done with two-dimensional.
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T1 spin echo. And this little object here,
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which was cold, may reverse itself, and over time,
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it may accumulate contrast, and all of a sudden,
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it will become hot or warm.
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So it will change from low signal to high signal.
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And that's another reason why you
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don't want to wait too long.
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You want to be early in the game so that you can see
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the pituitary microadenoma as cold and
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the rest of the gland is warm.
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Now,
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for those of you that don't have 3D,
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just get a three or a four-millimeter one, two,
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or three-slice view right in the middle of the gland,
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right through the pituitary tuft,
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and then perform your dynamic injection.
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Do it relatively quickly so that the
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scan time is 30 seconds or less,
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and then get your delayed image so you'll
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have one pretty early dynamic image,
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and then you'll have 160 to 90 to 122nd
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image using the 2D technique.
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And that way you'll see this phenomenon of cold
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converting to hot for a pituitary microadenoma.
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And don't forget to throw in your coronal T2 or an
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axial T2 just in case you have a macroadenoma
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that's going off to the side or something that's
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going up in the supracellar region.
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How's that sound?
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Good. Great. Let me make another comment.
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One thing that I think we're going to be focusing on,
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you're going to see as we get to the case review is
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something we used to be really sensitive to when
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we were kind of CT and plain film guys,
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and that is the size and shape of the sella.
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Okay, because that has a lot to do.
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We're going to talk about the surgical approaches as
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well. How are we going to treat some of these?
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Should we save that for the anatomic discussion?
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Yes. Well, let's do that.
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And we'll we're going to also follow up on a
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couple of things you mentioned here.
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Great.
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