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Training Collections
Library Memberships
On-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
Ultimate Learning Pass
Unlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Continuing Medical Education (State CME)
Complete all of your state CME requirements in one convenient place.
Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
Case of the Week (Free)
Get a free weekly case delivered right to your inbox.
Case Crunch: Rapid Case Review (Free)
Register for free live board reviews.
Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
For Training Programs
Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Compliance
NewTrack, fulfill, and report on all your radiologists' credentialing and licensing requirements.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
1 topic, 5 min.
1 topic, 3 min.
9 topics, 50 min.
Foot and Ankle Coils
4 m.Sagittal Ankle View
5 m.Sagittal Plane: Field of View
5 m.Ankle Short Axis Projection
8 m.Special Sequences and Pitfalls: Coronal and Paracoronal Plane
6 m.Ankle MRI: Additive Gradient Echo Sequence
6 m.Ankle Neutral Positioned Scans: Dorsiflexed Ankle
7 m.Different Sequences in Low Field Ankle Imaging
7 m.Ankle MRI: Expanded Field of View on 1.5 Tesla
7 m.33 topics, 1 hr. 41 min.
Ligamentous Anatomy on Neutral Position
4 m.Ankle MRI: Posterior Ligaments in Coronal Plane
3 m.Ankle MRI: Anterior Ligaments in Coronal Plane
2 m.Ankle MRI: Anterior Ligaments in Sagittal Plane
3 m.Ankle MRI: Posterior Ligaments in Sagittal Plane
3 m.Ankle Ligaments in Axial Plane
6 m.Lateral Collateral Ligamentous Anatomy: Coronal Projection
3 m.Deltoid Ligament Anatomy
5 m.Deltoid Ligament: Axial Plane
2 m.Deltoid Ligament: Sagittal Plane
2 m.Deltoid Ligament: Coronal Plane
4 m.Deltoid Ligament: Origins and Insertions
4 m.Deltoid Ligament: Superficial Layer Lateral view
2 m.Tendinous Anatomy
3 m.Achilles Tendon
5 m.Posterior Tibial Tendon
4 m.Peroneus Brevis: Axial and Sagittal View
4 m.Peroneus Brevis: Sagittal and Coronal view
3 m.Peroneus Longus
6 m.Tibialis Anterior Tendon
5 m.Extensor Hallucis Longus
3 m.Extensor Digitorum Longus
4 m.Extensor Digitorum Longus Pitfalls and Extensor Retinacula
5 m.Anterior Tarsal Tunnel Space
2 m.Anterior Tarsal Tunnel Syndrome
4 m.Deep Peroneal Nerve
2 m.Superficial Peroneal Nerve
2 m.Sural Nerve
2 m.Saphenous Nerve
2 m.Tibial Nerve
2 m.Sensory Nerve Supply
3 m.Medial Plantar Nerve
5 m.Lateral & Medial Plantar Nerves
5 m.5 topics, 17 min.
23 topics, 2 hr. 57 min.
Midfoot Subluxation: Lisfranc Ligament Injury
8 m.Lisfranc Ligament Injury
7 m.Lisfranc Injury: Nunley-Vertullo Classification
10 m.High Ankle Injury
13 m.Coronal Projection in Inversion Injury: Low Ankle Injury
8 m.Axial Projection in Inversion Injury: Low Ankle injury
8 m.Posterior Ankle Ligaments Anatomy
2 m.Ankle Impingement Syndromes: Posterolateral Impingement Syndrome
11 m.Anterolateral Impingement Syndrome
5 m.Sinus Tarsi Syndrome
10 m.Microtrabecular Stress Injury and Osteochondral Defect
9 m.Osteochondral Defect
11 m.Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) Type 1: Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy
10 m.Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) Type 2
4 m.Talocalcaneal Coalition
7 m.Achilles Tendon Tear
14 m.Medial Ankle Pain: R/O Psterior Tibial Tendon Tear
11 m.Peroneus Longus and Brevis Tendons Tear
4 m.Multiple Tendon Tears
12 m.Posterior Tibial Tendon Injury
6 m.Posterior Tibial Tendon Injury
5 m.Plantar Fibromatosis
6 m.Turf Toe
8 m.34 topics, 2 hr. 28 min.
Introduction to Foot & Ankle Masses
1 m.Ganglion Cyst
6 m.Lymphangioma
4 m.Hemangioma
5 m.Granuloma Annulare
5 m.Nerve Tumor
6 m.Plantar Fibromatosis
5 m.Charcot Foot
5 m.Brody's Abscess
9 m.Osteomyelitis and Fracture in the Big Toe
4 m.Osteomyelitis from Ingrown Toenail
4 m.Osteomyelitis with Multiple Tracts Infected
4 m.Septic Joint
7 m.Foreign Body- Splinter
5 m.Necrotizing Fasciitis
7 m.Infected Re-Rupture
3 m.Morton's Neuroma
7 m.Intermetatarsal Bursal Cyst
7 m.Stem Ligament Bursal Cyst
6 m.Dermato Fibroma Protuberans
4 m.Schwannoma
6 m.Synovial Sarcoma
7 m.Lipomatous Skin Tag
3 m.Calcaneal Lipoma with Infarction
4 m.unicameral bone cyst
3 m.PVNS
6 m.Giant tophus
5 m.Tenosynovial Cyst
3 m.GCT- Secondary ABC
6 m.Osteoid Osteoma- Focal
5 m.Os Naviculare Syndrome Type 2
5 m.ONS TYPE 3
4 m.Cystic Degeneration Rare Cyst of PB
3 m.Summary of Foot & Ankle Masses
2 m.0:01
Oh, what fun to look at a
0:02
diagram summarizing the deltoid.
0:06
Let's begin with the tibial spring ligament.
0:08
And we have its origin, but why no insertion site?
0:12
Because it inserts on a ligament.
0:16
And here are the origins and
0:18
attachments of that ligament, called the
0:19
superior calcaneonavicular ligament.
0:21
There's the ligament.
0:23
And here is the attachment.
0:25
It's a bony to ligamentous attachment.
0:29
And the most important one
0:30
of the superficial group.
0:32
In front of it, I'm not going
0:34
to change color right now.
0:35
We would have the tibionavicular ligament.
0:39
It's a pretty wispy one and hard to see.
0:42
The next one behind it and quite
0:45
oblique and having its own sight
0:48
would be the tibiocalcaneal ligament.
0:51
And then finally, in the back, we
0:53
would have the posterior tibiotalar
0:56
ligament, which is pretty short.
0:58
So, there's four of them.
1:00
Now, let's continue on and see
1:03
them each in their own right.
1:06
So the tibionavicular ligament.
1:08
It's going to go from a slightly more
1:09
anterior portion of the malleolar
1:13
anterior funiculus to the navicular.
1:18
Let's keep going, shall we?
1:20
The deep anterior tibiotalar ligament.
1:23
That one is underneath.
1:25
So this is not part of the superficial.
1:29
The deep cannot tear without the superficial.
1:33
But the superficial can tear without the deep.
1:36
So until this moment, I was only
1:38
showing you superficial ligaments.
1:39
Now I'm showing you a deep ligament,
1:42
and there's only two of them.
1:44
Let's keep going, shall we?
1:45
The tibiocalcaneal ligament.
1:48
This is part of the superficial system.
1:51
The next one back, origin and insertion.
1:55
The spring ligament.
1:57
We've already outlined that one.
1:59
That's the one that goes horizontal.
2:03
It's not really part of the collateral
2:05
per se, but it is a connector.
2:09
Between the medial malleolus and this ligament.
2:14
So it has a ligamentous attachment,
2:16
as previously discussed.
2:18
So that's the only reason why we've
2:20
included it in this compilation.
2:24
Then finally, we have the superficial
2:26
posterior tibial talor ligament, which is
2:30
also part of the superficial system, and then
2:33
we finish it off with the deep posterior.
2:37
So in other words, we really only have two deep.
2:40
We've got this one right here.
2:42
I'll draw over it.
2:44
I'll pick the same color, deep.
2:48
We've got another one that's deep anterior, deep.
2:53
Then everything else is superficial, and
2:56
we've outlined them from front to back,
2:59
tibionavicular, tibiospring, tibiocalcaneal,
3:03
and superficial posterior tibiotalar
3:06
ligaments with their origins and insertions.
3:09
You gotta love that.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
Oh, what fun to look at a
0:02
diagram summarizing the deltoid.
0:06
Let's begin with the tibial spring ligament.
0:08
And we have its origin, but why no insertion site?
0:12
Because it inserts on a ligament.
0:16
And here are the origins and
0:18
attachments of that ligament, called the
0:19
superior calcaneonavicular ligament.
0:21
There's the ligament.
0:23
And here is the attachment.
0:25
It's a bony to ligamentous attachment.
0:29
And the most important one
0:30
of the superficial group.
0:32
In front of it, I'm not going
0:34
to change color right now.
0:35
We would have the tibionavicular ligament.
0:39
It's a pretty wispy one and hard to see.
0:42
The next one behind it and quite
0:45
oblique and having its own sight
0:48
would be the tibiocalcaneal ligament.
0:51
And then finally, in the back, we
0:53
would have the posterior tibiotalar
0:56
ligament, which is pretty short.
0:58
So, there's four of them.
1:00
Now, let's continue on and see
1:03
them each in their own right.
1:06
So the tibionavicular ligament.
1:08
It's going to go from a slightly more
1:09
anterior portion of the malleolar
1:13
anterior funiculus to the navicular.
1:18
Let's keep going, shall we?
1:20
The deep anterior tibiotalar ligament.
1:23
That one is underneath.
1:25
So this is not part of the superficial.
1:29
The deep cannot tear without the superficial.
1:33
But the superficial can tear without the deep.
1:36
So until this moment, I was only
1:38
showing you superficial ligaments.
1:39
Now I'm showing you a deep ligament,
1:42
and there's only two of them.
1:44
Let's keep going, shall we?
1:45
The tibiocalcaneal ligament.
1:48
This is part of the superficial system.
1:51
The next one back, origin and insertion.
1:55
The spring ligament.
1:57
We've already outlined that one.
1:59
That's the one that goes horizontal.
2:03
It's not really part of the collateral
2:05
per se, but it is a connector.
2:09
Between the medial malleolus and this ligament.
2:14
So it has a ligamentous attachment,
2:16
as previously discussed.
2:18
So that's the only reason why we've
2:20
included it in this compilation.
2:24
Then finally, we have the superficial
2:26
posterior tibial talor ligament, which is
2:30
also part of the superficial system, and then
2:33
we finish it off with the deep posterior.
2:37
So in other words, we really only have two deep.
2:40
We've got this one right here.
2:42
I'll draw over it.
2:44
I'll pick the same color, deep.
2:48
We've got another one that's deep anterior, deep.
2:53
Then everything else is superficial, and
2:56
we've outlined them from front to back,
2:59
tibionavicular, tibiospring, tibiocalcaneal,
3:03
and superficial posterior tibiotalar
3:06
ligaments with their origins and insertions.
3:09
You gotta love that.
Report
Description
Faculty
Stephen J Pomeranz, MD
Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online
ProScan Imaging
Tags
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
MSK
Foot & Ankle
Acquired/Developmental
AI Technologies
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