Interactive Transcript
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This is a 44-year-old woman with a
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jumping injury, now with ankle pain.
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And I'm going to perform the search pattern
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as if I was sitting by myself in my office.
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And I start out, almost all the time, with the
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sagittal projection because it is comfortable.
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Unless I absolutely know the pathology is not
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going to show up in this view and in another view.
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So this is my expedient way of getting
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through the work during the day,
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and also keeping things interesting and efficient.
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So I start out with my sagittal image
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and I think, "Okay, jumping injury."
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That's usually not a collateral ligament injury.
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In other words, jumping with
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an inversion or eversion, okay.
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Then I would go straight to the axial.
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But just straight jumping up and down, sort of
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a pilon type of component or mechanism,
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I'm thinking about a fracture.
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So I go right to my proton density,
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fat suppression, SPAIR, SPIR, special
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fat sat, whatever you want to call it, and I
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scroll, and I have them linked together.
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Now I do have another sagittal.
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I have a gradient echo, additive gradient
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echo sagittal, also known as adage, merge,
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medic, MFFE, but I don't have it up.
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And there are two reasons why I don't have it up.
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One, I don't have enough spaces on my
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board so that you can see things real clearly.
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But the real reason I don't have it up
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is it's not very good for bone.
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And when I hear an axial load
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force, I'm looking for a fracture.
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And this particular sequence is
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great for osteochondral surfaces,
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with an emphasis on chondral
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and articular, but not for medullary bone.
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So let's keep scrolling the sensitive
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sequence for medullary bone.
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And I'm looking at the calcaneus.
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And I don't have the whole calcaneus on there.
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I'll make it a little smaller just so we get
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it all, where it works somewhat complete.
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And we scroll, and we don't see
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a fracture of the calcaneus.
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Perhaps we see a little periostitis.
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That's not where a fracture would be
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eccentrically like this.
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That's simply periostitis from plantar fasciitis.
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It has absolutely nothing to
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do with the jumping injury.
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And this swelling of the heel pad is a
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common physiologic phenomenon from
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just walking around and weight bearing.
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So I am not going to call this a fracture,
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even though it is a live, actively
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inflamed area, and the patient probably
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had pre-existing plantar fasciitis.
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So where would a fracture be?
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It would be here, in the lower third,
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but medullary, in the middle third,
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or sometimes verticalizing in the upper third.
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And fractures will either have a
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jagged pattern, if they are acute,
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or they'll have a wavy pattern if
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they're overuse or insufficiency related.
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So now that I have done my scrolling and looked
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for medullary edema, one word of caution.
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You can get a pure cortical fracture and have
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virtually no edema in the medullary space.
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So, if you're truly an expert or a master,
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your eye has to trace the cortex going
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both ways, both laterally and medially,
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and the cortices with this exception,
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which we've already outlined, are just fine.
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So what isn't fine?
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Well, if we look very carefully, we see
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that the dome of the talus has this funny,
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ill-defined area of increased water-weighted
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signal and slightly decreased T1 signal.
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Now, you might say, well, is that real?
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We needed another projection to prove it,
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and that is exactly why I have the coronal up.
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And I would have it up in my office
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so I know constantly where I am.
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And I'm expecting either a fracture,
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or an osteochondral injury, or some type
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of subtalar injury due to axial load.
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I know I don't have a subtalar injury,
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because I can see the subtalar space with
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the components of the subtalar space.
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So, my search is really based on the history.
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I'm doing a medullary search, I'm doing
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a cortical search, I'm doing what I call
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a pilon search for axial load forces
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that injure the subtalar space.
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I've got the talocalcaneal interosseous ligament.
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I've got the more centrally positioned
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cervical ligament right here.
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No edema around it.
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And although not really well seen, I have a few
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of the segments of the lateral retinaculum,
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of which there are three, a medial, an intermediate,
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and a lateral, none of which are swollen.
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Our area of swelling that we suspected
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sagittally, now remember we're coming across and
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we could be on the edge, of the talus is real.
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It's right there.
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Let's make it a little bigger for all you
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sports fans out there who like things big.
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The edema is real and what's on top?
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Cartilage.
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And is that cartilage smooth?
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Yes.
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And no.
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The cartilage is roughed and scuffed
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and buffed and impacted and injured.
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So this is an osteochondral injury.
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Now if we keep scrolling sagittally,
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you run into a terrific pitfall.
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Look at that pseudo-defect that looks
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so nasty in the sagittal projection,
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representing the malleolar notch in the talus.
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So you're volume-averaging this
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defect here, which is normal.
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That is not your osteochondral injury.
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That is your osteochondral
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injury, and it's a subtle one.
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Now let's look at our coronal again for a moment.
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I want to draw a little bit.
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And when... Let's pretend we have a defect
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on the other side, or an injury on the other side.
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If the injury goes all the way and involves the
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cortex, so that it leaves no free cortex along
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the edge, we call that a non-shouldered OCD.
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But if, on the other hand, the cortex is spared,
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we see an edge of dark signal around our defect,
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as we do medially, then that is shouldered.
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So, our shouldered superomedial defect has a depth,
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it'll have a length, it'll have a width, and the
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fact that it's shouldered makes it much easier,
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if it ever had to be grafted, to hold the graft
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in place, because we have some cortex to hold it.
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If we had a lesion like this,
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it would be non-shouldered.
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You can also get a good feel, not only for the
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defect, but its size, whoops, let me get out of
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my drawing tool, for its size, and also for the
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presence or absence of loose bodies,
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by scrolling the axial projection.
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Let's do that.
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And as we scroll the axial
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projection, we do see our lesion.
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There it is, right there.
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It's barely visible on the T2.
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It's barely visible on the T1.
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So it's the earliest of bony defects.
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And you might say, well, how do
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you get a cartilage defect,
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but not such a prominent bony defect?
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Well, the cartilage is like a shock absorber.
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So in this case, the cartilage
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absorbed most of the force.
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Sometimes the force, depending
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upon the axis of injury,
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will transmit through the cartilage.
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The cartilage is slightly swollen,
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yet the bone is more heavily affected.
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So it can go either way.
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In this case, I would say the cartilage is
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more affected than the actual underlying bone.
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And we do have an AP dimension,
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a transverse dimension.
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The abnormality is shouldered.
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And now, to complete the examination, I would
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go up and down looking for a potential body,
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not expecting to find one, because I don't have
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a defect. But I would do that just to check.
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I would also look at the collaterals, especially
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the anterior talofibular ligament, which is a
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little bit attritional but present, just to make
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sure I didn't get the wrong history, that the
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patient didn't have an inversion-type injury.
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And then I would just do a general
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check in the axial projection of
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all the tendons and their position.
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Lateral, 2.
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Medial, 1, 2, 3.
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Anterior, 1, 2, 3, 4.
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And one, the achilles in the back, and I
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just do that in general very, very quickly.
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I also get a great look at the
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neurovascular bundle on the medial side,
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I get a great look at the retinaculum.
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These are just routine checks that I
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would go through, not specifically related
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to a drive-down, pylon-type injury.
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And while we're at it, we do see the
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swelling in the plantar fascia that is real
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that preexisted before this patient's injury.
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Now, you'll hear a lot of people talk
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about the grading of stability of OCDs.
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And I think size definitely matters.
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Position also matters.
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You know, eccentricity.
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Ones that are non-shouldered are
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much more likely to dislodge.
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And then you'll also hear that when you have an
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OCD, if that OCD is surrounded by fluid signal
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intensity, so we'll pretend our green is fluid.
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When I say fluid, I mean fluid on the T2.
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Not edema on the PD spur, but
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actual bright fluid like this.
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Water white, super bright, homogeneous,
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fluid signal intensity that communicates
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with the cortex, that does place the
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OCD at higher risk of dislodgement.
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And that's probably as much as you need
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to know about the surrounding signal
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related to your OCD, with one exception.
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If around your OCD you see a lot of small little
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cystic foci, like this, that usually means the
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bony component of your OCD is wiggling around and
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irritating and producing cystic degeneration or
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little atrocious ganglia of the surrounding bone.
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And that usually means that there
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is micro-instability present.
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So in summary, shouldered,
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OCD with chondral scuffing irregularity and
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blistering, size, length, width, and depth given.
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No evidence of loose bodies, small
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effusion, incidental plantar fasciitis and periostitis. Next.
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