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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
Now that we have a basic understanding of
0:02
what Salter-Harris injuries look like from
0:04
the cartoon diagrams I showed you before,
0:06
let's look at some practical examples.
0:09
Uh, we're going to start out
0:10
with a Salter-Harris II.
0:12
This is a shoulder of a 14-year
0:15
old boy who injured himself.
0:17
I think one of the first things we
0:18
notice as we look at this, is this
0:20
little piece of bone that has sort
0:21
of fallen into the axillary recess.
0:24
Uh, but as we look more closely, I begin
0:26
to wonder, is there a little bit of
0:28
widening, asymmetric widening here at the
0:30
very lateral aspect of that, uh, proximal
0:33
humerus, uh, compare the width over here
0:35
versus the width down here, um, hard to say.
0:39
Let's see what other views look like.
0:42
Here is sort of a, uh, Y view, if you will.
0:46
If you can appreciate it, here's the
0:48
coracoid process anteriorly, the acromion
0:51
is going to be somewhere over here, and the
0:53
glenoid is going to be somewhere over here.
0:54
So, maybe there's a little inferior
0:57
subluxation, but again, hard to say.
1:00
What I notice first of all, besides that,
1:03
is the fact that as I try to follow the
1:05
growth plate this way, I see a little
1:09
step-off right over here between this
1:11
piece of bone and this piece of bone.
1:14
That suggests maybe there is a metaphyseal
1:17
component to this injury, because this bone
1:20
should really line up with that bone over here.
1:22
This axillary view is, uh, not
1:25
very helpful, I don't think.
1:26
We just know here that there's no dislocation.
1:28
We know this is anterior because
1:30
this is the coracoid process.
1:31
The coracoid process is always the most
1:34
anterior structure in the shoulder.
1:36
So when we see this, uh, and here's the
1:38
glenoid right over here, there's good
1:39
congruity between the glenoid surface
1:42
and the surface of your humeral head.
1:44
So no shoulder dislocation.
1:47
And finally, another look at that oblique.
1:49
Coracoid process, again that little
1:51
step-off here bothers me a little bit,
1:53
maybe a slight widening over here.
1:54
So I'm suspecting a Salter-Harris injury of
1:57
some sort in addition to this little piece of
2:00
bone that's fallen off into the axillary recess.
2:04
In the next vignette, I'm going to show you what
2:07
the MRI of this particular pathology looks like.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
Now that we have a basic understanding of
0:02
what Salter-Harris injuries look like from
0:04
the cartoon diagrams I showed you before,
0:06
let's look at some practical examples.
0:09
Uh, we're going to start out
0:10
with a Salter-Harris II.
0:12
This is a shoulder of a 14-year
0:15
old boy who injured himself.
0:17
I think one of the first things we
0:18
notice as we look at this, is this
0:20
little piece of bone that has sort
0:21
of fallen into the axillary recess.
0:24
Uh, but as we look more closely, I begin
0:26
to wonder, is there a little bit of
0:28
widening, asymmetric widening here at the
0:30
very lateral aspect of that, uh, proximal
0:33
humerus, uh, compare the width over here
0:35
versus the width down here, um, hard to say.
0:39
Let's see what other views look like.
0:42
Here is sort of a, uh, Y view, if you will.
0:46
If you can appreciate it, here's the
0:48
coracoid process anteriorly, the acromion
0:51
is going to be somewhere over here, and the
0:53
glenoid is going to be somewhere over here.
0:54
So, maybe there's a little inferior
0:57
subluxation, but again, hard to say.
1:00
What I notice first of all, besides that,
1:03
is the fact that as I try to follow the
1:05
growth plate this way, I see a little
1:09
step-off right over here between this
1:11
piece of bone and this piece of bone.
1:14
That suggests maybe there is a metaphyseal
1:17
component to this injury, because this bone
1:20
should really line up with that bone over here.
1:22
This axillary view is, uh, not
1:25
very helpful, I don't think.
1:26
We just know here that there's no dislocation.
1:28
We know this is anterior because
1:30
this is the coracoid process.
1:31
The coracoid process is always the most
1:34
anterior structure in the shoulder.
1:36
So when we see this, uh, and here's the
1:38
glenoid right over here, there's good
1:39
congruity between the glenoid surface
1:42
and the surface of your humeral head.
1:44
So no shoulder dislocation.
1:47
And finally, another look at that oblique.
1:49
Coracoid process, again that little
1:51
step-off here bothers me a little bit,
1:53
maybe a slight widening over here.
1:54
So I'm suspecting a Salter-Harris injury of
1:57
some sort in addition to this little piece of
2:00
bone that's fallen off into the axillary recess.
2:04
In the next vignette, I'm going to show you what
2:07
the MRI of this particular pathology looks like.
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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