Interactive Transcript
0:00
Let's take a look at this 24-year-old professional
0:04
athlete, large man, inversion injury with
0:08
the foot in a somewhat neutral position.
0:13
Let's start out with the axials because
0:16
that's where a lot of the information is.
0:19
And I'm going to show you this massive
0:20
anterolateral hematoma, which shows up as an area
0:25
of clinical ecchymosis, and that is totally scary.
0:31
Okay, now let's do what I would do if I was
0:34
sitting alone by myself reading the case.
0:38
And I'm going to put up all my sagittals.
0:40
So I've got three sagittals.
0:42
You probably only really need two.
0:45
And I'm going to blow them up just a little bit.
0:48
On the left, in the left corner,
0:50
where in the blue trunks, is my
0:53
proton density fat suppression image.
0:56
My all-purpose sensitive sequence to
0:58
look at where all the, uh, all the hot
1:00
spots are, and there's a lot of them.
1:02
The foot is massively swollen on the lateral
1:05
side, but I'm particularly interested
1:07
in fractures and the fracture pattern.
1:09
I have very little signal change in the
1:13
posterior malleolus because if I did,
1:15
if I saw periosteal swelling, periosteal
1:18
hematoma, or fracture back here, I'm starting
1:21
to think more of a high ankle-type injury.
1:24
I am also scrolling around, I'm going over
1:27
to my gradient echo and my T1-weighted image.
1:30
To see if I've got any bodies inside
1:32
the joint on the gradient echo image.
1:34
Yes, there is a large, uh, large
1:36
os trigonum that, that fractured.
1:40
Uh, or, or a lateral talus process that
1:42
fractured, maybe an old Shepherd's fracture.
1:45
And then on the far right,
1:46
I've got my T1-weighted image.
1:48
And that in particular is the one
1:50
where I'm scrolling and trolling, to
1:53
use a popular social media word. I'm
1:55
trolling for osteochondral defects.
1:59
And I don't have any.
2:00
Okay, that's good.
2:02
Now that I've kind of worked my way through the
2:04
sagittals and I've also done a pretty brief but
2:08
comfortable inspection of the peroneae, which
2:11
are often injured in ankle sprains, which we
2:15
are very suspicious of because of the hematoma.
2:18
I'll quickly slide over to the
2:20
medial side and look at the retro and
2:23
inframalleolar posterior tibial tendon.
2:26
It looks very good.
2:28
It looks excellent.
2:29
Okay, while I'm at it, I've got a bird's
2:32
eye view of the sinus tarsian canal.
2:34
The canal's more medial, more of a hole.
2:37
The sinus tarsi is more lateral, more open.
2:40
And in the sinus tarsi, I've got trouble.
2:42
Big trouble.
2:44
I've got a lot of swelling.
2:45
I've got some irregular fibrillated dark
2:49
tissue that suggests that the subtalar
2:53
ligamentous anatomy has been affected.
2:57
by whatever happened to this gentleman.
3:00
Okay, before I go back to my
3:02
axial, let's put up a coronal.
3:06
Now, what are we going to get out of the coronal?
3:09
This is a heavily fat-suppressed, water
3:12
weighted coronal image, and we'll get
3:14
another perhaps better view of the
3:16
bones, and especially of the talar dome.
3:20
Talar dome, perfect.
3:22
But we do have an injury to the bone, specifically
3:26
the distal aspect of the talus, right up against
3:29
the navicular, and what are we going to call this?
3:32
Well, it was pretty hard to
3:33
see in the other projections.
3:35
Let's look at the T1 before
3:36
we decide what to call it.
3:38
We missed it on our first scroll.
3:41
It was there.
3:42
Nothing's displaced.
3:44
There are no discrete lines.
3:46
There's very slight flattening or deformity.
3:49
So we are going to call it
3:50
a microtrabecular injury.
3:52
Or you could go so far as to use the
3:54
F-word, microtrabecular fracture.
3:57
But nothing more than micro.
3:59
It's intramedullary, it's enchondral, it
4:02
involves the spongy bone, nothing is avulsed.
4:05
You'll trace the cortex to make
4:07
sure that it's even and smooth.
4:10
It's a little bit edematous here because
4:11
it's gray, but nothing's pulled off.
4:15
And even if there was a small fleck, that
4:17
wouldn't affect the management in this case.
4:21
Alright, let's go back to
4:21
our single coronal image.
4:25
Wow, look at that collection of blood.
4:30
We're in trouble.
4:32
What else are we going to get
4:33
out of the coronal projection?
4:34
Thank you very much.
4:35
We'll get the deltoid.
4:37
The deltoid is almost always swollen
4:40
in somebody with an inversion injury.
4:42
Because when you invert, you're
4:45
gonna compress the deltoid.
4:46
Much like you would compress an accordion.
4:49
And when you bleed into that compressed
4:51
deltoid, people call that a tear.
4:55
Now, deltoid injuries shouldn't
4:57
concern you all that much.
4:58
You shouldn't fret over them because
5:00
we almost never operate on them.
5:02
They almost always heal themselves.
5:04
And in fact, an operation on
5:06
the deltoid may be a bad thing.
5:08
So you might say, deltoid swelling,
5:11
contusion, sprain, hematoma.
5:13
Yes, it's a little busy, but if you're
5:15
starting to really drill into the deltoid
5:18
in an inversion injury, you're probably
5:20
wasting your and other people's time.
5:23
Let's go back to the other
5:25
strengths of the coronal.
5:27
Another strength of it is to look
5:29
at the calcaneofibular ligament.
5:31
It's a very tough ligament to see.
5:33
Now that right there is not a deltoid.
5:37
The calcaneofibular ligament.
5:40
It actually masquerades as the course
5:42
of the ligament, but it's going to the
5:44
Achilles, that's not the calcaneofibular ligament.
5:49
That's a deep bundle of another ligament.
5:54
So it's, it's not the one
5:56
that we're searching for.
5:56
Where's the one we're searching for?
5:58
Right here.
6:00
And it's gonna course towards the
6:02
posterior aspect of the calcaneus.
6:04
It ends right there as a stump.
6:07
We can't follow it any further.
6:09
So our calcaneofibular ligament, even
6:11
though we're neutrally, sorry, even
6:13
though we're slightly plantar flexed, in an
6:16
optimal position to see it, we don't see it.
6:19
We don't see it because it's ruptured.
6:21
What else can we glean from
6:22
this coronal projection?
6:24
What's going on over here?
6:25
Well, we said there's blood, but normally
6:28
there's an infralateral retinaculum.
6:30
So let's talk about the subtalar ligaments.
6:34
Immediately, we've got the
6:36
talocalcaneal interosseous ligament.
6:38
It's intact, it's thin, it's
6:40
dark, it's delicate, it's normal.
6:43
The next ligament over, probably
6:45
the most important stabilizer of the
6:47
subtalar space, the cervical ligament.
6:51
It's fat, it's irregular, it's
6:53
ragged, it's nasty, it's torn.
6:58
He's got a subtalar injury.
7:00
Now let's go over to the next group, the extensor
7:03
retinaculum, which contains the stem ligament
7:06
and also known as the frondiform ligament.
7:11
Oh, it's filled with blood and we can't
7:12
see anything that is linear and obliquely
7:15
coursing over on the lateral side.
7:17
It's fat, it's torn.
7:19
And the blood and fluid of the subtalar
7:21
space coming out to mix with the large
7:26
hematoma on the lateral aspect of this
7:28
patient's ankle that's going up and down.
7:32
So now it's time to go back to the axial
7:36
projection and see what else is going on.
7:40
And I'd like to do that in a separate vignette
7:43
and save you some time so you can turn this
7:44
one off and move on to part two if you wish.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.