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The Lisfranc Joint

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Okay, we're going to talk about the

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tarsometatarsal joint, and that discussion

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is going to focus on the Lisfranc

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joint, the Lisfranc ligament named

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after Jacques Lisfranc de Saint Martin.

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These are injuries that are either high-impact or

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low-impact, and they're actually divided as such.

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A high-impact injury would be due to a greater

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energy force like a motor vehicle accident, and

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these are termed Lisfranc fracture displacements.

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Thank you very much.

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You can also see a lower-impact injury in sports,

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and these are typically called Lisfranc injuries

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or midfoot sprains, but there's quite

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a bit of crossover, and it's not uncommon to

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see, you know, big people playing sports where

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they get stomped on, or they have a twist on the

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grass or turf producing a Lisfranc type of injury

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that can either be low-impact or high-impact.

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So they're not so easy to divide

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up by just visual inspection.

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The Lisfranc fracture displacements are

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about, um, uh, 50 percent of the time

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responsible for post-traumatic degenerative

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midfoot arthritis in the athlete.

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Lisfranc sprains are really tough to

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detect on physical exam and on imaging.

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They're a source of big-time morbidity.

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In fact, almost 20 percent of all athletes,

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whether they're 15 years old or 30 years

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old, high school, or a professional, are

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not able to return to their sport after a

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mid-level to high-level Lisfranc injury.

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In one study, 25 percent of all

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Lisfranc injuries were missed or

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appeared normal on initial radiographs.

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And in my experience, that number

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is probably higher than that.

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It's probably closer to 40 or 50%.

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On weight-bearing radiographs, Lisfranc

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injuries may not be visible initially.

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They can sometimes take up to

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six weeks to become apparent.

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Initially, with the swelling, the midfoot may

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be stiff, but you don't actually see separation.

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And even on the classic or cardinal weight-bearing

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views, it may take a bit of time for that splaying

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to occur between the base of the first and second,

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which used to be the hallmark of diagnosis.

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Now, if we look at the midfoot, there

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are three metatarsal bases that have

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sort of a trapezoidal morphology to them.

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And you can see that the base of

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the second metatarsal is recessed

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between the third and the first.

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And it sits directly adjacent

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to the second cuneiform.

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And we're going to label these.

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We're going to give them labels C1, C2, and C3.

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And then we're going to label

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this M1, M2, M3, M4, M5.

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And of course, we have the cuboids.

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Now this configuration, that is kind of

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a little bit like a Roman arch, confers

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stability to this arc right here.

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And you're going to better appreciate the

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arc in the short axis or axial projection.

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But I want to point out Lisfranc ligament complex.

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Now I'm on the dorsum of the foot.

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This is known as the dorsal Lisfranc ligament.

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The Lisfranc ligaments go from C1 to M2.

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This one's kind of stubby.

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Then let's flip it over and go to

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the plantar aspect of the foot.

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So we're on the underbelly of the foot.

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That's C1, M2, the plantar

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portion of the Lisfranc complex.

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So you might say, okay, there's a

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dorsal, there's a plantar, well, which

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one's the Lisfranc ligament officially?

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Which one's the main ligament?

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The answer is neither.

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The main ligament is the one that's in between.

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So it's under this one and it's over this one.

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And it also is going to be short and stubby.

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It's between those two.

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I've just drawn it in in red.

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And because it's short and stubby,

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when you bisect it, it doesn't retract.

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It's almost like you slice a stick of

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butter, but the butter doesn't fall apart.

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All you see is a line through the butter

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stick, and that's what happens when

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you have a tear of what we call the

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proper interosseous Lisfranc ligament.

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So we've got a dorsal, we've got a plantar,

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and in between we've got, not drawn, a proper.

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Then we've got some other lesser ligaments.

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C2M2 ligament, also known as a tarsal metatarsal.

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We also have a C1M3 ligament.

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Now these plantar ligaments are a little

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skinnier, and they're a little longer.

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So, when they tear, they may retract.

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Unlike our main, proper Lisfranc

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ligament, that doesn't really retract,

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because it's stuck in a very small space.

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But when you lose that proper ligament,

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and you use, you lose these plantar

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ligaments, You've got big problems.

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Obviously, there's another

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tarsometatarsal ligament drawn in here.

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So, Pearl, you're looking at an MRI.

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You're looking at a stir, fat suppressed

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sequence, or a spur, or a spare, or a special.

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Very water emphasized.

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And you see high signal at C2,

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C3, the cuboid, M4, M3, M2.

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You better think Lisfranc ligament injury.

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Otherwise, you and your patient

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are going to be in trouble.

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

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