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Training Collections
Library Memberships
On-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
Ultimate Learning Pass
Unlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Continuing Medical Education (State CME)
Complete all of your state CME requirements in one convenient place.
Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
Case of the Week (Free)
Get a free weekly case delivered right to your inbox.
Case Crunch: Rapid Case Review (Free)
Register for free live board reviews.
Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
For Training Programs
Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Compliance
NewTrack, fulfill, and report on all your radiologists' credentialing and licensing requirements.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
2 topics, 5 min.
38 topics, 2 hr. 9 min.
Introduction to Pediatric Imaging
2 m.Hyaline Cartilage Anatomy
3 m.The Physis & Calcification Centers
3 m.Epiphyseal Cartilage
4 m.Fibrocartilage & Hyaline Cartilage
6 m.MR Appearance of Cartilage In Different Age Groups
5 m.FOPE
4 m.Lymphoma of the Bone
12 m.Blount Disease
4 m.Gymnast’s Wrist
5 m.Pre-ossification Centers
3 m.Elbow Effusion
2 m.OCD In the Elbow
3 m.Trochlear OCD on MRI
2 m.Trochlear OCD on Arthrogram
2 m.Ultrasound Guided Arthrogram Injection
3 m.OCD In the Capitellum, Loose Body
3 m.Avascular Necrosis in the Elbow
3 m.The Fish Tail Deformity
4 m.OCD In the Knee, LAME
4 m.Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease on X-Ray
3 m.Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease on MRI
5 m.Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
4 m.Abscess
4 m.Infection in the Physis
3 m.Tug Lesion
7 m.Salter-Harris Classification System
5 m.Salter-Harris Fracture on X-Ray
3 m.Salter-Harris 2 in the Shoulder
3 m.Salter-Harris 3 in the Knee
3 m.Salter-Harris 3 on CT Imaging
3 m.Indications for MRI in a Pediatric Shoulder
4 m.Performing Arthrograms in the Shoulder
3 m.Ultrasound Guidance in Shoulder Arthrogram
3 m.Salter-Harris 5 on MRI
3 m.Physeal Injury, Cartilage Deformity
5 m.Chondroblastoma in the Knee
5 m.Chondroblastoma in the Ankle
5 m.9 topics, 41 min.
3 topics, 13 min.
3 topics, 12 min.
13 topics, 39 min.
Anorexia Nervosa
3 m.Chondroblastoma
4 m.Chondroblastoma in the Shoulder
4 m.Complex Regional Pain Syndrome
4 m.Lipoblastoma
4 m.Leukemia
4 m.Leukemia, Assessing for Asymmetry
4 m.Myositis Ossificans
3 m.Normal Patchy Bone Marrow
4 m.Osteoblastoma
4 m.Adamantinoma verus Osteofibrous Dysplasia
2 m.Osteoid Osteoma in the Foot
3 m.Osteoid Osteoma in the Finger
3 m.5 topics, 11 min.
0:00
Let's look at another
0:01
injury involving the physis.
0:04
Here we have multiple projections of the right
0:08
knee in a 14-year-old boy with a knee injury.
0:12
Here is a frontal projection.
0:14
We notice that there is a lucency right
0:18
here going through the epiphysis of the
0:21
distal femur, sort of separating the
0:23
lateral condyle from the medial condyle.
0:26
And the line goes just like this
0:29
over here and hits the physis.
0:32
And I can sort of visualize that this
0:35
physis on the medial side may be slightly
0:38
wider than the physis on the lateral side.
0:42
Remember, the physis is a disc-shaped structure,
0:44
so you're actually seeing two projections, one
0:47
barely over here and one over here, because
0:50
you're seeing one surface versus the other,
0:53
um, as we sort of obliquely view the image.
0:56
But over here, I can imagine that this
0:58
physis may be slightly wider than the
1:00
physis, either one of these physes
1:01
on the right, on the lateral side.
1:03
Let's see how obliquity helps us.
1:06
Here's an oblique view, and we can see
1:09
that component of the epiphysis much better.
1:13
Not only do we see that, but we also
1:14
see the little fragmentations here,
1:16
so it may be somewhat comminuted.
1:18
And we have, again, entering the physis,
1:20
maybe slightly widening of that medial physis.
1:23
Hard to say what's going
1:24
on the lateral physis.
1:26
For that, we've got the other obliquity.
1:29
On the other obliquity, the fracture
1:31
line really is very different.
1:33
Difficult or impossible to see.
1:35
So this sort of illustrates another point.
1:37
When we do have knee injuries, sometimes
1:40
a simple frontal and lateral view may
1:42
not be adequate to show you the injuries.
1:45
You may need to get oblique views to really
1:47
profile everything that needs to be seen.
1:51
So this obliquity doesn't help us very much.
1:53
Finally, here's a lateral view.
1:56
On the lateral view, we don't
1:57
see the fracture so well.
1:59
But what we do see, maybe we see a little bit
2:01
over here, it's hard to say, but what we do
2:03
see is this huge joint effusion over here.
2:06
And it's a very dense joint effusion.
2:07
It has an effusion that's similar
2:09
in density to the soft tissues around it.
2:13
And the rest of the knee looks okay.
2:15
In the next vignette, we'll go over
2:17
how this looks both on CT and on MRI.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
Let's look at another
0:01
injury involving the physis.
0:04
Here we have multiple projections of the right
0:08
knee in a 14-year-old boy with a knee injury.
0:12
Here is a frontal projection.
0:14
We notice that there is a lucency right
0:18
here going through the epiphysis of the
0:21
distal femur, sort of separating the
0:23
lateral condyle from the medial condyle.
0:26
And the line goes just like this
0:29
over here and hits the physis.
0:32
And I can sort of visualize that this
0:35
physis on the medial side may be slightly
0:38
wider than the physis on the lateral side.
0:42
Remember, the physis is a disc-shaped structure,
0:44
so you're actually seeing two projections, one
0:47
barely over here and one over here, because
0:50
you're seeing one surface versus the other,
0:53
um, as we sort of obliquely view the image.
0:56
But over here, I can imagine that this
0:58
physis may be slightly wider than the
1:00
physis, either one of these physes
1:01
on the right, on the lateral side.
1:03
Let's see how obliquity helps us.
1:06
Here's an oblique view, and we can see
1:09
that component of the epiphysis much better.
1:13
Not only do we see that, but we also
1:14
see the little fragmentations here,
1:16
so it may be somewhat comminuted.
1:18
And we have, again, entering the physis,
1:20
maybe slightly widening of that medial physis.
1:23
Hard to say what's going
1:24
on the lateral physis.
1:26
For that, we've got the other obliquity.
1:29
On the other obliquity, the fracture
1:31
line really is very different.
1:33
Difficult or impossible to see.
1:35
So this sort of illustrates another point.
1:37
When we do have knee injuries, sometimes
1:40
a simple frontal and lateral view may
1:42
not be adequate to show you the injuries.
1:45
You may need to get oblique views to really
1:47
profile everything that needs to be seen.
1:51
So this obliquity doesn't help us very much.
1:53
Finally, here's a lateral view.
1:56
On the lateral view, we don't
1:57
see the fracture so well.
1:59
But what we do see, maybe we see a little bit
2:01
over here, it's hard to say, but what we do
2:03
see is this huge joint effusion over here.
2:06
And it's a very dense joint effusion.
2:07
It has an effusion that's similar
2:09
in density to the soft tissues around it.
2:13
And the rest of the knee looks okay.
2:15
In the next vignette, we'll go over
2:17
how this looks both on CT and on MRI.
Report
Faculty
Mahesh Thapa, MD, MEd, FAAP
Division Chief of Musculoskeletal Imaging, and Director of Diagnostic Imaging Professor
Seattle Children's & University of Washington
Tags
X-Ray (Plain Films)
Trauma
Pediatrics
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
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