Interactive Transcript
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I'm in the back of the ankle
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now, looking at collaterals.
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A very tough projection to assess
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these ligaments, which, by the way,
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don't usually tear with acute injuries.
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More common to be impinged upon in plantar
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flexures with posterior impingement
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syndrome, especially ballet dancers.
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Let's have a look, and we'll start up high.
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So, you'll notice I'm not over at the fibular tip.
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I'm inside the fibular tip
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between it and the tibia.
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So there's, there's the tibia.
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And let's pick up this ligament right here.
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Which is the posterior tib fib ligament.
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Sometimes it's confused for
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a mass because it's so dark.
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Now let's follow it.
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Let's follow it, uh, a little more laterally.
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And as we do, I think you can see
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it a little better right there.
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The anterior component of it,
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here, is the inferior transverse
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ligament of the tib fib syndesmosis.
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So there's a back portion, the tib fib ligament.
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And the inferior tib fib component,
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which is part of the crural system.
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Then, we have the intermalleolar ligament,
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which courses obliquely between malleoli.
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It also is sometimes confused for a mass if it's
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seen as a round structure, but its linearity
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is very apparent on the T1-weighted image and
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on the proton density fat suppression image.
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So, so far I've shown you the two
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components of the high ankle tib fib.
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The posterior tib fib and the inferior
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transverse ligament of the tib fib.
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The intermalleolar ligament.
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And then finally down here we have these two
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structures that are going to merge together to
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form the low ankle posterior talofibular ligament.
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Now that one too, especially as you approach
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the midline, is often confused, especially
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when there's an effusion around it.
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No, that is simply the
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posterior talofibular ligament.
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Now, some of you are wondering, well,
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where is the calcaneofibular ligament?
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It's so small, and it's curving at
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such an obliquity to the sagittal
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projection that you can't see it.
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You see one tiny smidgen of it.
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I'm going to blow it up right here.
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You can see an origin of it, and that's it.
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That tiny little structure is the
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origin of the calcaneofibular ligament.
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So, the sagittal projection, more
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importantly, is a source of confusion,
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sometimes producing the confusing picture
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of the ligaments looking like bodies, when
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in fact they're simply normal structures.
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And you can follow them back and forth, medial to
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lateral, across the ankle, and then once you learn
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the order of them, things become a lot easier.
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