Interactive Transcript
0:00
Well, welcome.
0:00
I want to focus a little bit on pivot shift injuries
0:03
and menisci again.
0:05
We're drilling into menisci pretty,
0:07
pretty hard,
0:08
and I'm starting out with an axial
0:11
T2 weighted image from a
0:14
just a standard 1.5 Tesla machine
0:17
using T2 fast spin echo.
0:19
I'm sure many of you already noticed that there
0:21
is a pretty large fluid collection here,
0:23
and it's a blood fluid level.
0:25
First point,
0:26
meniscal tears don't give you blood fluid levels,
0:29
so there has to be something else wrong,
0:32
although that's not why we're showing the case.
0:34
But as we scroll it,
0:35
we see the reason for the blood fluid level.
0:37
There's a fracture back here,
0:39
which means something pretty violent happened,
0:43
which leads me to the focus of this discussion,
0:47
which is pivot shift injuries
0:50
and meniscal pathology.
0:52
I don't so much care about the ACL tear
0:54
I'm going to show you,
0:55
or the PCL sprain that you're going to see.
0:58
What I'm interested in is the menisci.
1:01
But before we get to the case,
1:03
I'm going to practice my drawing skills a little further,
1:07
and I am going to make you a meniscus,
1:11
kind of in a 3D here.
1:14
I'm even going to try and make it have some depth.
1:16
So, this is the height of the meniscus right here.
1:20
And as we discussed before,
1:23
we have an inner third, a middle third,
1:25
and an outer third.
1:27
Now when you have a pivot shift injury,
1:30
and I think most of you can see me,
1:33
what actually happens is the femur is going to go...
1:38
the femur is going to go backwards
1:41
and it's going to slam down on the back of the tibia.
1:44
So when it does that,
1:46
and sometimes there's a twist with it,
1:48
sometimes it's just direct.
1:49
And when it does that,
1:50
it crunches not only the bone,
1:53
because that's why we have the fracture here,
1:55
but it also crunches the meniscus.
1:57
So when that meniscus gets crunched,
1:59
it often cracks.
2:01
And that crack is usually a vertical crack
2:04
in the outer third.
2:05
It happens in almost every single person.
2:08
Now, if we look at the meniscus from the side,
2:11
here's our side view, or a sagittal view,
2:15
this would be the back.
2:16
So, we'll call this posterior with a P.
2:18
And this is the back where the crunching
2:21
happens, right here.
2:22
So we get this crunch,
2:24
and then we get our crack.
2:25
And that crack could be a partial crack,
2:28
which we do nothing about, by the way.
2:30
That crack could be a crack all the way through.
2:34
Pardon my lack of steady hand here,
2:37
a linearity.
2:38
That is still, most often,
2:41
not a surgical situation.
2:43
What would you call that?
2:44
You would call that a longitudinal vertical tear,
2:49
as opposed to another kind of vertical tear
2:52
we're going to learn about,
2:53
which is the radial vertical tear.
2:56
So that longitudinal vertical tear,
2:58
even though it goes top to bottom,
2:59
we say it's full thickness.
3:01
The first one I showed you is partial thickness,
3:03
is almost never operated on.
3:06
Now, what do we mean by length?
3:08
If that vertical tear goes from here to here
3:13
and we're able to measure it from here to there,
3:18
that would be its length.
3:21
Now, how would we measure it?
3:23
We would measure it by...
3:25
I'm going to have to change
3:27
colors here for a moment.
3:28
Let's say we have a coronal.
3:31
We'd measure on the coronal from here to here,
3:34
because that's the part of the tear
3:35
that would show up.
3:35
Let's say that's 2 cm.
3:38
And now, the tear is going forward.
3:39
See, here's the tear right here.
3:41
So the next slice is going to be here.
3:44
We just start adding slices.
3:45
So, we started out on foss
3:47
or parallel to the tear, 2 cm.
3:50
And now we add a 4 mm cut, 2.4.
3:54
Another 4 mm cut, 2.8.
3:56
And another 4 mm cut 3.2.
3:58
So, the length of this vertical tear
4:01
is going to be 3.2 cm.
4:04
Would we operate on it?
4:06
Probably not.
4:07
If it's not gapped, if it's in the outer third,
4:11
we're still going to leave it alone,
4:13
which is counter to prior teaching,
4:16
where most of these very,
4:18
very long vertical tears used to get sewn.
4:21
Now, occasionally, if somebody's in there,
4:22
you will see them put a stitch in it.
4:24
But characteristically,
4:26
this type of pivot shift tear is not surgical.
4:32
Now, let's take that one step further.
4:35
So, now that I've done my very manually
4:38
dexterous erasure,
4:40
let's go back to
4:43
our view of the meniscus from the side
4:46
and our three dimensional view.
4:52
And we'll give the meniscus a little bit of depth here.
4:54
I think I did a better job on this one.
4:57
So, sometimes the meniscus gets crunched.
5:01
But also remember, and I think you can see me,
5:04
the femur is going backwards, right?
5:06
The tibia is going forwards like this.
5:09
So there's got to be some crunching,
5:12
but maybe there's a little less crunching
5:14
and a little more stretching
5:15
because the meniscus has to be attached to something.
5:18
Remember, from our first series,
5:20
we said the meniscus was attached
5:22
peripherally and at the roots,
5:24
but its inner free tip,
5:26
in other words, right here, is free.
5:28
It's floating free.
5:30
So now, we are stretching.
5:32
Maybe we're crunching, maybe we're not.
5:34
So maybe we have the vertical tear,
5:36
maybe we don't.
5:37
But we're stretching,
5:38
and as we stretch, stretch, stretch,
5:41
we get a strain, or a bleed, or a microbleed.
5:46
That's really common.
5:47
And we call that a meniscocapsular strain,
5:49
or a meniscocapsular hemorrhagic strain.
5:53
Occasionally, if it's really violent,
5:57
this will break off its attachments
6:00
and it'll flip over on itself.
6:01
It'll tumble.
6:03
That's a true meniscocapsular separation.
6:05
Those are really uncommon.
6:07
And in fact, they're rare.
6:09
Now, on the medial side,
6:11
it looks a lot different than the lateral side,
6:13
because on the medial side, these attachments,
6:16
which I'm going to make a little different color,
6:19
they're kind of like fat's domino,
6:22
a pool player.
6:23
They're kind of like short,
6:24
little stubby things.
6:25
So, you don't really see them.
6:27
All you see is a bucket of blood.
6:31
We'll make that red,
6:32
because I'm trying to be a little clever here.
6:34
So, you'll see some kind of fuzzy stuff here.
6:37
And if the patient's a little bit unlucky,
6:40
then maybe we also happen to have
6:43
a little vertical tear here as well.
6:47
So, you might have two things.
6:49
This is an extremely common scenario.
6:52
It happens in almost every pivot shift.
6:54
Now, sometimes what actually happens
6:57
is you get this,
6:59
and I'm going to make my line, if I can,
7:03
through some
7:06
limited manual dexterity,
7:07
I'm going to make my line a little thinner,
7:09
a lot thinner.
7:10
And instead of having bleeding back here,
7:13
instead of having a pretty good, obvious,
7:16
fairly thick vertical tear, over here,
7:18
we have something very,
7:20
very thin right next to the capsule,
7:23
which a lot of times,
7:25
our friends misconstrue as the capsule itself,
7:29
but it's not.
7:30
It's in front of the capsule.
7:31
And so I refer to that,
7:33
it's my own terminology,
7:34
I call that a sliver tear,
7:35
because it's a tiny little thin line,
7:38
vertical tear,
7:39
vertical longitudinal tear
7:42
right next to the capsule.
7:44
And this little tear frequently coexists
7:47
with that bleed.
7:49
In fact, it's the majority of pivot shifts,
7:53
and the minority of them,
7:55
but not an insignificant minority,
7:57
will have pretty thick vertical tears,
8:00
but still in the outer third.
8:02
All of these tears,
8:05
almost uniformly, are non-surgical and heal
8:08
because of the vascularity of the red red zone
8:11
in the outer third.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.