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The Anatomy of the Lateral Collateral Ligament Complex - FCL

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Knee anatomy.

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Collaterals.

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The LCL and the LCL complex,

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although the posterolateral corner will be covered on its own.

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In the back,

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we have the large structure of the biceps femoris, which you're

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going to see has a short and a long head and two separate

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footprints of insertion on the fibular head.

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Superficially located and extra-articular in some portions of it,

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mostly distally, intraarticular proximally

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is the popliteus tendon, which has an oblique course,

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and then continues on down into the screen as the popliteus muscle and

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myotendinous unit. Kind of crisscrosses and sits atop of the

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fibular collateral ligament, which some people refer to as

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the lateral collateral ligament.

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Perhaps correctly, perhaps incorrectly,

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but that will be a story for another day.

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And its origin is going to be about here.

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And then slightly posterior to it,

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although not drawn in because we're not in the right sagittal location,

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is the origin of gastrocnemius lateral head.

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So let's talk about the LCL complex.

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We're not going to address the corner right now.

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There are three structural layers of the LCL complex.

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Layer number one,

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the most superficial layer consists of the iliotibial tract and

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its anterior expansion, and the superficial portion of

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the biceps femoris with its posterior expansion.

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And most people don't know that

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the lateral collateral complex is divided

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up into layers like the medial side.

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Layer number two consists of the quadriceps retinacula anteriorly,

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and then two patellofemoral ligaments or

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retinacula posteriorly, which are variably seen.

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Layer one and layer two merge at the

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lateral aspect of the patella.

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And if you've seen the medial collateral vignette,

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so too, the layers one and two merge along the medial patella.

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Then we've got layer number three.

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This is the deepest layer.

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It consists of the lateral joint capsule.

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It includes attachments to the lateral meniscus, the lateral

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capsular ligament with its meniscofemoral and meniscotibial

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components, much like analogous to that seen on the medial side.

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The lateral collateral ligament or fibular collateral ligament

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is located posteriorly. And it's kind of weird.

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It's between the superficial and deep divisions of layer three

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which kind of split, and the LCL is caught in the middle.

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So it is technically considered by

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anatomists a layer two structure.

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Let's have a look at this anatomy on MRI.

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Trauma

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Knee

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