Interactive Transcript
0:00
On the previous vignette, I showed you this
0:03
six-year-old patient's radiograph, which
0:06
demonstrated some collapse and sclerosis
0:09
of the right femoral head, a little bit
0:11
of lucency under the subchondral surface,
0:13
and what looked like a joint effusion.
0:17
This is the MR, and I think we can
0:19
see many of those findings here.
0:21
We have a coronal, fat-suppressed,
0:24
fluid-sensitive sequence.
0:26
All this bright stuff in the joint is
0:28
fluid, and look how asymmetric it is
0:30
compared to the contralateral normal side.
0:33
So indeed, there was joint effusion, as
0:36
manifested by displacement of some of the soft
0:39
tissue structures on the plain radiograph.
0:41
That area of subchondral lucency is seen very
0:46
well as an area of high signal, serpiginous, just
0:49
under the chondral surface on the right side.
0:52
And the fact that the head is a little
0:54
flattened up here, compared to the
0:57
contralateral side, tells me that there is
0:59
a little bit of collapse that has happened.
1:01
So these are all signs of decreased perfusion,
1:05
or not getting enough blood supply, avascular
1:07
necrosis, however you want to call it.
1:09
In addition, what this shows that the plain
1:12
film doesn't show is that some of these
1:15
changes are also happening in the metaphysis.
1:18
Look how the metaphysis is brighter.
1:20
On the lateral side and also on the
1:22
medial side, showing that there is some
1:24
added stress happening causing edema,
1:27
and inflammation in this area, okay?
1:30
And there's also some areas or some
1:32
pockets of increased fluid-like signal
1:35
in the capital femoral epiphysis.
1:38
I want to show you the value of
1:41
contrast imaging on a patient like this.
1:44
So I'm going to bring up three images at once.
1:47
So on this one, I'm going to put the
1:49
coronal T1 Fatsat, which is this.
1:56
In the middle image, I'm going to
1:58
put coronal T1 Fatsat post-contrast.
2:04
And on the final, I'm going to put a
2:05
coronal T1 Fatsat subtracted image.
2:09
In fact, I'm going to go just like this,
2:11
so you can see as much of this as possible.
2:14
And really, you want to look
2:15
at both sides at the same time.
2:18
Again, this is fat-saturated without
2:22
contrast, and this is fat-saturated
2:24
T1 with IV contrast in place.
2:28
And this here is a fat-saturated subtracted image.
2:32
In other words, I took this image
2:34
and digitally subtracted out this
2:37
image to give you this image.
2:40
So, pre-contrast, we sort of
2:42
see the areas of effusion.
2:43
We see a little bit of collapse.
2:45
You know, we see the area of abnormal
2:47
signal here that was shown as bright
2:49
signal on the STIR on the lateral aspect.
2:51
After we give contrast, we notice that there
2:53
is considerable enhancement of the synovium.
2:56
There is enhancement in the area of edema.
2:59
There is enhancement in the area in the
3:00
periphery here, both laterally and medially, but
3:04
no significant enhancement in the femoral head.
3:08
Compare it to the normal left side.
3:10
There should still be some minimal
3:13
enhancement on a normal ossified femoral
3:17
capital epiphysis, as we see over here.
3:19
The reason we get the subtracted image is if
3:22
there are subtle findings of decreased enhancement
3:24
on one versus the other, it becomes magnified.
3:27
It becomes really much more
3:29
conspicuous than the subtracted images.
3:32
Look at this image and this image.
3:34
Yes, you can tell there's a difference
3:35
between this and this, but look how dramatic
3:38
that difference is in the subtracted images.
3:41
So if you do post-contrast images looking
3:44
for avascular necrosis, it really behooves
3:47
you to get subtracted images, because if
3:49
there are subtle changes, maybe not as
3:51
dramatic as this, you will pick it up on
3:54
the subtracted images, where you may not
3:56
pick it up on the non-subtracted images.
3:58
Again, we see beautifully the areas of
4:00
contrast enhancement, in the synovium, in
4:03
the metaphysis, and at the periphery of the
4:06
epiphysis, with a central area of non-enhancement.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.