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📌𝗝𝗼𝗶𝗻 𝗢𝘂𝗿 𝗧𝗲𝗹𝗲𝗴𝗿𝗮𝗺 𝗖𝗵𝗮𝗻𝗻𝗲𝗹 𝗛𝗲𝗿𝗲:- https://t.me/conceptualmedicine 📌 𝐅𝐨𝐥𝐥𝐨𝐰 𝐨𝐧 𝐈𝐧𝐬𝐭𝐚𝐠𝐫𝐚𝐦:- https://www.instagram.com/conceptual_... 🌸 Gynecology Image-Based Discussion (Part 3) | NEET PG Finish your image mastery with oncology-to-OR visuals that exam writers love. We start with gyn oncology imaging: endometrial cancer on TVUS (thick, heterogeneous stripe; focal mass) and MRI staging cues—T2 hypointense junctional zone breach for myometrial invasion depth, cervical stromal invasion, and lymph-node assessment; when PET/CT adds value for nodal or distant disease. For cervical cancer, you’ll correlate colposcopy images (acetowhite change, mosaicism, punctation, atypical vessels) to directed biopsy and see MRI hallmarks of parametrial invasion that flip management to chemoradiation. Ovarian malignancy is framed by ultrasound red flags (solid papillary projections with vascular flow, thick septa, ascites, omental caking) and how indeterminate masses move to MRI (fat-sat for dermoid, T1/T2 mapping for endometrioma vs hemorrhagic cyst) or straight to gynecologic oncology referral. We then pivot to urogyne and pelvic floor imaging: transperineal US/MRI patterns of cystocele, rectocele, enterocele, urethral hypermobility, sling position and mesh complications; plus postpartum ovarian vein thrombosis on CT/MRI (enlarged enhancing thrombus with perivascular stranding) that explains fever and flank pain. Rounding out the clinic, we review device and post-procedure pictures—IUD malposition/perforation, uterine artery embolization beads for fibroids, lymphocele after node dissection, and pelvic abscess/hematoma after hysterectomy with when to choose antibiotics, drainage, or return to OR. Throughout, tight “see → do” cues link each image to the next step: biopsy vs SIS vs hysteroscopy for focal endometrial lesions; MRI for staging; oncology referral triggers; antibiotics vs IR drainage for collections; and targeted pelvic floor rehab vs surgical repair—exactly how Step 2 CK and Western clinics make decisions. We close with rapid fire differentials you’ll actually meet: vulvar lesions on dermoscopy (HPV-related VIN vs lichen sclerosus vs melanoma cues) that dictate punch vs excisional biopsy; Bartholin cyst/abscess ultrasound (anechoic vs complex with hyperemia) and Word catheter vs marsupialization; classic HSG silhouettes of intrauterine adhesions (“saw-tooth” cavity) vs septate uterus; and postmenopausal bleeding pathways when a “thin” stripe hides a focal polyp—why SIS or hysteroscopy beats blind sampling. By the end of Part 3, you’ll turn complex gyn images into fast, guideline-concordant actions from oncology staging to pelvic floor, post-op complications, and vulvar disease—precisely the skill set that scores on USMLE Step 2 CK and serves in U.S. gynecology practice. #USMLEStep2CK #Gynecology #GynOncology #PelvicUltrasound #PelvicMRI #EndometrialCancer #CervicalCancer #Colposcopy #OvarianCancer #AdnexalMass #PelvicFloor #IUDComplications #UterineArteryEmbolization #PostoperativeComplications #BartholinCyst #HSG #SIS #VulvarDermatoscopy #OvarianVeinThrombosis #MedicalEducationUSA #USMLEPreparation #Step2CKPrep #ConceptualMedicine #MedicalConcepts #NEETPGPrep #FMGE2025 #USMLE2025 #ClinicalMedicine #MBBSConcepts #NextExamPrep #MedSchoolMadeEasy #MedStudentLife #HighYieldMedicine #PathophysiologySimplified #LearnMedicineFast #VisualMedicine #MedicalMnemonics #CrackNEETPG #USMLEStep1Prep #MedEducationRevolution #MBBSShorts #DoctorInTheMaking