Training Collections
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
Training Collections
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
1 topic, 4 min.
1 topic,
7 topics, 30 min.
37 topics, 1 hr. 24 min.
Coronal Anatomy: Bony Anatomy
3 m.Coronal Anatomy: Hyaline Cartilage
3 m.Coronal Anatomy: Variance
4 m.Coronal Anatomy: Triangular Fibrocartilage
5 m.Coronal Anatomy: Peripheral TFCC Relationships
5 m.Coronal Anatomy: Intrinsic Ligaments Part 1
3 m.Coronal Anatomy: Intrinsic Ligaments Part 2
4 m.Coronal Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 1
1 m.Coronal Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 2
1 m.Coronal Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 3
2 m.Coronal Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 4
1 m.Coronal Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 5
2 m.Coronal Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 6
2 m.Diagramatic Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 7
2 m.MRI Correlation: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 8
2 m.Coronal Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 9
2 m.Coronal Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 10
2 m.Coronal Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 11
2 m.Coronal Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 12
2 m.Extrinsic Ligaments: Thumb Part 1
1 m.Extrinsic Ligaments: Thumb Part 2
1 m.Extrinsic Ligaments: Thumb Part 3
2 m.Axial Anatomy: Radioulnar Joint
4 m.Proximal Anatomy: Nerves, Tendons & Vessels
4 m.Axial Anatomy: Extensor Tendons
4 m.Axial Anatomy: Extensor Tendons on MRI
3 m.Axial Anatomy: The Carpal Tunnel
5 m.Axial Anatomy: Guyon’s Canal
4 m.Axial Anatomy: Intrinsic Ligaments
3 m.Axial Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments
2 m.Axial Anatomy: Collateral Ligaments
3 m.Axial Anatomy: Extrinsic Ligaments Part 2
2 m.Sagittal Anatomy Part 1
2 m.Sagittal Anatomy Part 2
2 m.Sagittal Anatomy Part3
3 m.Sagittal Anatomy Part 4
4 m.Sagittal Anatomy Part 5
4 m.9 topics, 26 min.
Triangular Fibrocartilage: The Importance of the TFC
2 m.Triangular Fibrocartilage: Cartilage Anatomy
3 m.Triangular Fibrocartilage: Bony Architecture
6 m.Triangular Fibrocartilage: Anatomic Boundaries
7 m.Triangular Fibrocartilage: Micrograph View
3 m.Triangular Fibrocartilage: Magnified MRI
3 m.Triangular Fibrocartilage: Zooming Out on MRI
2 m.Triangular Fibrocartilage: Capsulo-synovial Reflections
3 m.Triangular Fibrocartilage: Focus on the Ulnar Styloid
3 m.19 topics, 1 hr. 32 min.
Case Review: Focus On Instability Part 1
3 m.Case Review: Focus On Instability Part 2
4 m.Case Review: Focus On Instability Part 3
4 m.Case Review: Focus on Instability
5 m.Case Review: 21 Year Old Male, Jammed Wrist and Now Has Pain
7 m.Case Review: Staging SLAC Wrist
5 m.Case Review: 52 Year Old Male with Medial Wrist Pain
9 m.Case Review: 15 Year Old Gymnast with Wrist Pain
8 m.Case Review: 14 Year Old Male Who Fell On Outstretched Hand
7 m.Case Review: 15 Year Old Female with Ulnar Sided Pain
8 m.Case Review: 42 Year Old Woman with Ulnar Sided Pain
6 m.Case Review: Additional Findings Discussion From Previous Case
7 m.Case Review: 42 Year Old Female – Assessing Variance
8 m.Case Review: 56 Year Old Male – Wrist Instability Overview
3 m.Case Review: 56 Year Old Male – Classifying Carpal Instability
4 m.Case Review: 56 Year Old Male – Classifying Carpal Instability Part 2
4 m.Case Review: 56 Year Old Male – Classifying Instability in the Short Axis
4 m.Case Review: 56 Year Old Male – Classifying Instability in the Sagittal Plane
4 m.Case Review: 56 Year Old Male – Classifying Instability – Dislocations
4 m.11 topics, 1 hr. 4 min.
Scapholunate Injury from FOOSH
4 m.Differentiating Between Type 1 & 2 Lunates
2 m.Necrosis of the Lunate
8 m.Non-Stener UCL Injury
6 m.Professional Athlete with Hyperextension Injury
9 m.High Grade Stener Lesion
7 m.Microtrabecular Fracture of the Scaphoid
9 m.High Grade Waist Fracture of the Scaphoid
7 m.Radial Pulley Injury
6 m.Degenerated TFC
8 m.Peripheral TFC Injury with Styloid Remodeling
5 m.0:00
Welcome to MRI online, coronal bony anatomy.
0:04
Oh, it's delicious.
0:06
Because it's like an AP radiograph of the wrist.
0:10
All you have to do is remember, never
0:12
lower Tilly's pants mother might come home.
0:20
Those are the bones.
0:21
So we've got navicular, lunate, triquetrum,
0:26
pisiform, multangular, multangular, greater
0:29
and lesser multangular, also known as
0:31
trapezium and trapezoid, capitate, capitate.
0:33
And in the axial projection, you're
0:36
going to see the hamulus or hamate hook.
0:40
Well, that's pretty simple.
0:42
Then we've got the radius and the ulna.
0:46
The ulna fits in the sigmoid notch of the radius,
0:48
also known as the ulnar notch, and we'll pay
0:51
very close attention to the relationship and
0:55
congruence of this area and look for fluid as
0:58
an indirect sign of a problem with the TFC.
1:04
We're interested in the status, the
1:07
smoothness, the congruity with the adjacent
1:10
soft tissues of the ulnar fovea or fossa.
1:15
We're looking at the shape or lack thereof,
1:18
blunting, overgrowth, fracture, fragments
1:22
distal to it of the ulnar styloid.
1:25
We're looking at the lunate fossa of
1:27
the radius and looking at the congruence
1:30
and cartilage relationship of both.
1:33
And we're looking, importantly, at the scaphoid
1:35
fossa of the radius, for this is where the
1:39
changes of slack wrist, or scapholunate
1:43
advanced collapse, may manifest themselves
1:47
and add to our grading system for slack wrist.
1:51
Don't forget, you're also going to be
1:53
evaluating the carpo metacarpal junctions for
1:56
erosions, especially in laborers and people
2:00
with So that's basic, basic bony anatomy.
2:04
Thank you.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
Welcome to MRI online, coronal bony anatomy.
0:04
Oh, it's delicious.
0:06
Because it's like an AP radiograph of the wrist.
0:10
All you have to do is remember, never
0:12
lower Tilly's pants mother might come home.
0:20
Those are the bones.
0:21
So we've got navicular, lunate, triquetrum,
0:26
pisiform, multangular, multangular, greater
0:29
and lesser multangular, also known as
0:31
trapezium and trapezoid, capitate, capitate.
0:33
And in the axial projection, you're
0:36
going to see the hamulus or hamate hook.
0:40
Well, that's pretty simple.
0:42
Then we've got the radius and the ulna.
0:46
The ulna fits in the sigmoid notch of the radius,
0:48
also known as the ulnar notch, and we'll pay
0:51
very close attention to the relationship and
0:55
congruence of this area and look for fluid as
0:58
an indirect sign of a problem with the TFC.
1:04
We're interested in the status, the
1:07
smoothness, the congruity with the adjacent
1:10
soft tissues of the ulnar fovea or fossa.
1:15
We're looking at the shape or lack thereof,
1:18
blunting, overgrowth, fracture, fragments
1:22
distal to it of the ulnar styloid.
1:25
We're looking at the lunate fossa of
1:27
the radius and looking at the congruence
1:30
and cartilage relationship of both.
1:33
And we're looking, importantly, at the scaphoid
1:35
fossa of the radius, for this is where the
1:39
changes of slack wrist, or scapholunate
1:43
advanced collapse, may manifest themselves
1:47
and add to our grading system for slack wrist.
1:51
Don't forget, you're also going to be
1:53
evaluating the carpo metacarpal junctions for
1:56
erosions, especially in laborers and people
2:00
with So that's basic, basic bony anatomy.
2:04
Thank you.
Report
Faculty
Stephen J Pomeranz, MD
Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online
ProScan Imaging
Tags
Trauma
Non-infectious Inflammatory
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
MRI
Hand & Wrist
Congenital
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