Interactive Transcript
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Knee anatomy on MRI.
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The Medial Collateral Ligament.
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Layers number two and three.
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Layer two, unfortunately,
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the middle layer is also known as the Superficial MCL.
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This is confusing. You'll have to memorize it.
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Layer number three,
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also known as the Deep Layer,
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is composed of the joint capsule.
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And we're going to divide up layer number three into an
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anterior third, a middle third, and a posterior third.
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The anterior third of layer three is attached to the
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anterior horn of the medial meniscus, and includes the
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patellomeniscal ligament, which I'll show you.
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It's reinforced by some of the fibers very
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far anteriorly of the medial retinaculum.
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The middle third of layer three is known as the Deep MCL
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or medial capsular ligament.
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In other words, the capsule.
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And finally,
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the posterior third in the back of layer number three,
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the deep layer, is the posterior oblique ligament which
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is formed by fusion of layers number
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two and layer number three.
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There are three arms of this ligament,
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also known as the POL,
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superficial, tibial, and capsular.
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The oblique popliteal ligament is the last component of
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the posterior third of layer three and
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it's all the way around the back.
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The diagram will help make more sense of it.
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Here's a sagittal diagram showing the patella in the
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front and the medial gastrocnemius in the back
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to get you oriented, anterior to posterior.
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The anterior structures,
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the anterior deep structures are not really imaged here,
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other than the MPFL on this diagram,
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which is part of layer number two.
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The medial patellofemoral ligament goes right into the
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superficial MCL, which is the middle layer,
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which is vertically oriented,
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which many of you might have called
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it in the past, the tibial collateral ligament.
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And it's pretty short from front to back.
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It's in the middle of the coronal plane
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as we go from anterior to posterior.
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Now, when we get posterior,
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we start to blend layer number
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two into layer number three.
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There is a layer number three under here, but we can't
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see it because it's covered up by the middle layer.
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Layer number two, which is right there.
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Layer number three,
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which is merging or fusing with layer number two is
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called the POL or posterior oblique ligament.
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There might be a little plane of separation
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between the two for the surgeon.
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The POL has a triangular point to it posteriorly.
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If we were to wrap the POL around posteriorly,
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that would be part of the joint capsule, and that would
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be called the oblique popliteal ligament or OPL.
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So it would go OPL.
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layer three.
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POL,
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layer three.
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Superficial MCL,
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layer two.
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Underneath that is the capsule, part of layer number three.
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That may help make this more sensible for you using
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the diagram. Let's try a coronal diagram.
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Layer number one, the Crus layer.
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Layer number two,
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also known as the middle layer or
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superficial portion of the MCL,
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what many of you might have called
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the tibial collateral ligament.
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There is a fat pad between these two
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and sometimes between these two.
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Layer number three, the deep layer,
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has an anterior third,
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a middle third, and a posterior third.
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The middle third is composed of capsular tissue and the
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meniscofemoral and meniscotibial or coronary ligament.
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But as we get more posteriorly,
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let's see what happens.
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Here's layer number two,
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what we used to call the tibial collateral ligament,
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now known as the middle layer or superficial MCL.
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It is contiguous with the MPFL.
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This is also layer number two, which is fused,
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by the way, with layer number one.
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There's layer number one.
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And then finally, layer number three, the deepest layer,
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which is composed of the capsule,
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which becomes the OPL all the way around back,
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and is the POL in the posteromedial corner of the knee.
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Let's look at an MRI to help solidify these anatomic concepts.
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So, let's focus on layers number two and three
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in the axial projection on a T2 MRI.
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Here's layer number two,
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the medial patellofemoral ligament,
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which comes back posteriorly and becomes layer number
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two again, the superficial portion of the MCL,
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which you might have previously labeled as the
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tibial collateral ligament.
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Layer number two.
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Deep to this anteriorly is the meniscopatellar ligament.
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Layer number three.
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In the mid-coronal plane,
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the capsule makes up the deep
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layer or layer number three.
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And although it's difficult to see the capsule directly,
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we do see the meniscofemoral and meniscotibial
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coronary ligaments lining up in the mid-coronal plane in
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the middle of the knee to form layer number three.
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Then, as we move more posteriorly, let's do that.
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That tissue fuses layers number two with layer number three,
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the capsule, to form the POL.
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And sometimes with a little bit of joint fluid or a little swelling,
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you can clearly separate the POL from
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some of the surrounding structures.
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And then all the way around back is the OPL,
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the oblique popliteal ligament,
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which is the most posterior aspect of the deep
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portion layer number three of the MCL.
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This concludes our discussion of layers number two and
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three in the medial collateral ligament on MRI.
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