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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.
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
55-year-old man with wrist instability and pain.
0:04
There are a multitude of findings, but the
0:06
most important are the loss of the intrinsics,
0:11
which we often evaluate in the coronal
0:13
projection, namely the scapholunate ligament.
0:16
It's completely gone with a widened
0:18
appearance of these two structures.
0:20
On x-ray, this is known as the
0:22
Terry Thomas sign, because poor Mr.
0:25
Terry Thomas had a big space between
0:27
his teeth, and there is a big space
0:30
between the scaphoid and the lunate.
0:34
That space is obvious on the T1-weighted image.
0:36
It's not a space; it's a gully.
0:39
It's not a gully; it's a gorge.
0:41
In other words, it's a big one.
0:44
So the next thing I might do, if I was reading
0:47
this case in my office by myself, is to see
0:51
what the scaphoid and lunate are doing in the
0:54
sagittal projection before I proceed any further.
0:58
Let's do that, shall we?
1:00
Here's the sagittal projection.
1:03
Let's scroll the sagittal.
1:06
Typically, when you lose the scapholunate
1:08
ligament, the lunate will be dorsal-facing.
1:13
So, this is ventral, palmar; this is dorsal.
1:17
Here's our lunate.
1:18
Our lunate is not dorsal-facing.
1:23
Our lunate is ventral-facing or palmar-facing.
1:27
It's the opposite of what you would
1:30
expect in a scapholunate ligament tear.
1:34
Why is that?
1:36
We've got a counterintuitive
1:37
finding in the sagittal projection.
1:41
That finding tells you there must be something
1:43
wrong not just with the scapholunate ligament.
1:47
There's got to be something also wrong with
1:49
the lunotriquetral ligament, and there is.
1:52
It's torn.
1:53
But by using the sagittal projection findings that
1:56
are incongruent, you're going to come to the correct
1:58
conclusion that both intrinsic ligaments are lost.
2:03
But we're not done yet with the sagittal projection.
2:05
Let's see what our scaphoid is doing.
2:09
Our scaphoid should normally stand up
2:12
about 60 degrees relative to the radius.
2:16
In other words, we said this
2:19
is the long axis of the radius.
2:21
Our scaphoid should look something
2:22
like this, in terms of its angle.
2:25
But instead, our scaphoid is laying down.
2:29
It's laying down because the
2:31
scaphoid stabilizers are torn.
2:35
One of which is the scapholunate ligament.
2:38
So, so far from this complex case, scapholunate
2:42
ligament failure, the presence of a ventral-facing
2:46
lunate, here it is, so-called volar intercalary
2:51
segmental instability, which leads us back
2:53
to the coronal to diagnose lunotriquetral
2:56
ligament tear, then back to the sagittal, which
3:00
shows that the scaphoid is laying down, and
3:02
there is rotatory instability of the scaphoid.
3:06
This wrist is in big trouble.
3:08
It's headed for a fusion.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
55-year-old man with wrist instability and pain.
0:04
There are a multitude of findings, but the
0:06
most important are the loss of the intrinsics,
0:11
which we often evaluate in the coronal
0:13
projection, namely the scapholunate ligament.
0:16
It's completely gone with a widened
0:18
appearance of these two structures.
0:20
On x-ray, this is known as the
0:22
Terry Thomas sign, because poor Mr.
0:25
Terry Thomas had a big space between
0:27
his teeth, and there is a big space
0:30
between the scaphoid and the lunate.
0:34
That space is obvious on the T1-weighted image.
0:36
It's not a space; it's a gully.
0:39
It's not a gully; it's a gorge.
0:41
In other words, it's a big one.
0:44
So the next thing I might do, if I was reading
0:47
this case in my office by myself, is to see
0:51
what the scaphoid and lunate are doing in the
0:54
sagittal projection before I proceed any further.
0:58
Let's do that, shall we?
1:00
Here's the sagittal projection.
1:03
Let's scroll the sagittal.
1:06
Typically, when you lose the scapholunate
1:08
ligament, the lunate will be dorsal-facing.
1:13
So, this is ventral, palmar; this is dorsal.
1:17
Here's our lunate.
1:18
Our lunate is not dorsal-facing.
1:23
Our lunate is ventral-facing or palmar-facing.
1:27
It's the opposite of what you would
1:30
expect in a scapholunate ligament tear.
1:34
Why is that?
1:36
We've got a counterintuitive
1:37
finding in the sagittal projection.
1:41
That finding tells you there must be something
1:43
wrong not just with the scapholunate ligament.
1:47
There's got to be something also wrong with
1:49
the lunotriquetral ligament, and there is.
1:52
It's torn.
1:53
But by using the sagittal projection findings that
1:56
are incongruent, you're going to come to the correct
1:58
conclusion that both intrinsic ligaments are lost.
2:03
But we're not done yet with the sagittal projection.
2:05
Let's see what our scaphoid is doing.
2:09
Our scaphoid should normally stand up
2:12
about 60 degrees relative to the radius.
2:16
In other words, we said this
2:19
is the long axis of the radius.
2:21
Our scaphoid should look something
2:22
like this, in terms of its angle.
2:25
But instead, our scaphoid is laying down.
2:29
It's laying down because the
2:31
scaphoid stabilizers are torn.
2:35
One of which is the scapholunate ligament.
2:38
So, so far from this complex case, scapholunate
2:42
ligament failure, the presence of a ventral-facing
2:46
lunate, here it is, so-called volar intercalary
2:51
segmental instability, which leads us back
2:53
to the coronal to diagnose lunotriquetral
2:56
ligament tear, then back to the sagittal, which
3:00
shows that the scaphoid is laying down, and
3:02
there is rotatory instability of the scaphoid.
3:06
This wrist is in big trouble.
3:08
It's headed for a fusion.
Report
Faculty
Stephen J Pomeranz, MD
Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online
ProScan Imaging
Tags
Non-infectious Inflammatory
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
MRI
Idiopathic
Hand & Wrist
Congenital
Acquired/Developmental
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