Interactive Transcript
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Here, we have a 12-month-old boy
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with a mass felt at the very medial aspect of the knee.
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And we could see that mass right over here.
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The image on your left is a coronal T1-weighted image.
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And the image on your right is a coronal T1-weighted fat-saturated image.
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So, I'm going to give you a rule that's almost always true, okay?
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If you have a soft tissue mass in a child
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less than three years of age and it has fat in it, if you could somehow show
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that there's fat in it, it's going to be benign almost all the time, okay?
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The rule doesn't hold anymore if the kid is
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more than three years of age, or if the mass does not contain fat.
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But if you have those two criteria met, less than three years of age,
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has demonstrable fat on MRI, then you can be pretty confident,
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no matter how much it enhances,
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no matter how ugly it may look infiltrating, that it's going to be benign.
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And typically, it's going to be a lesion such as this one, which is a lipoblastoma
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or lipoblastomatosis, or some kind of a fat-containing hamartoma,
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or it could even be involuting hemangioma that has fat in it.
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So all those conditions are benign.
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This one happens to be a lipoblastoma.
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How do I know that?
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It's hard to tell initially,
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but if we look at it closely, these are corresponding slices.
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T1 on your left, T1 fat sat on your right.
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What is fat in this mass?
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The dark stuff isn't fat.
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The fat is going to be, have the same signal as the subcutaneous fat over here.
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So this stuff over here, this bright stuff, that is fat.
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So if that stuff gets dark on the fat-suppressed sequence,
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we can be confident that that is fat we're looking at.
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So looking over here, look at the tissue here.
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That really is darker, isn't it?
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That does...
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look at this part right over here,
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that does get darker relative to this part over here.
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So we know that this mass contains fat.
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And I told you in the beginning that this kid was 12 months of age.
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So now, we can be very confident that this is a lipoblastoma, a benign lesion.
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Now, let's look at the fluid-sensitive sequence, which can look awfully bad.
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Here's a fluid sensitive sequence. Very bright.
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It is well encapsulated,
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but encapsulation in and of itself does not guarantee benignity.
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Okay?
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So don't get fooled with encapsulated lesions.
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Let's look at the post contrast images.
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Looking at the post contrast images, there are areas of enhancement, right?
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Look at this.
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So, looking at post contrast doesn't help you.
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What helps you is the T1-weighted and the T1-weighted fat sat to show
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that there are fat-containing regions that suppress.
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So this is a benign lipoblastoma.
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It may still need to get resected, but it's not malignant.
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