Interactive Transcript
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Hello and welcome to Noon Conferences
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hosted by MRI Online.
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In response to the changes happening around the
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world right now in the shutting down of in-person
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events, we have decided to provide free daily
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noon conferences to all radiologists worldwide.
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Today, we're joined by Dr. Stephen J. Pomeranz.
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He is the founder of MRI Online.
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He's authored numerous medical textbooks in MRI,
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including the MRI Total Body Atlas.
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He is an avid conference lecturer.
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Chairs fellowship training programs in a more and advanced imaging
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and he is also the CEO
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and medical director of ProScan Imaging.
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Reminder, there will be time
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at the end of this lecture for a Q&A session.
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Please use the Q&A feature to ask all of your
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questions, and we'll get to as many as we can before
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our time is up. That being said,
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thanks so much for joining us today.
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Dr. Pomeranz, I will let you take it from here.
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Today, we're going to be talking about menisci.
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And my motto is, "Think it. Learn it. Apply it."
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And that's what we're going to do.
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Ashley has given you my faculty disclosures.
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I have nothing else to disclose.
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And we're going to get right to it.
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One of your primary jobs as a radiologist and as a
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musculoskeletal radiologist is to save the whales and
1:11
save the menisci. You need them.
1:13
In years past,
1:14
we indiscriminately resected small tears and
1:17
we're no longer going to go down that lane.
1:21
Let's talk about meniscus physiology and anatomy.
1:24
There is physiologic signal in a meniscus due to
1:27
diffusion from the joint towards the periphery that
1:31
does not communicate or approach the upper
1:33
lower or inner articular surface.
1:35
This is a given.
1:37
A tear is when one of the above is violated.
1:41
In other words, you have a signal that approaches one of these
1:43
surfaces and/or the meniscal shape is altered.
1:48
Here's a side or lateral view of the meniscus.
1:51
Gross specimen and reticulin staining
1:54
showing meniscal vascularity.
1:56
Here's the meniscus as a triangle.
1:58
The outer third of the meniscus,
2:00
particularly in young pediatric individuals,
2:03
is pretty well vascularized, and so tears in this region,
2:07
which are most commonly vertical,
2:09
will heal on their own in the majority of cases.
2:13
The meniscus has some very complex attachments.
2:16
The medial meniscus is less mobile than the lateral
2:19
meniscus. And it's firmly fixed to the joint capsule.
2:23
So, it is more prone to certain types of injuries.
2:26
There is a femoral meniscal attachment that is contiguous.
2:30
Comes in contact with and blends
2:31
with the deep portion of the medial collateral ligament,
2:35
known as the meniscofemoral ligament or MFL.
2:39
A lot on this covers a larger portion of the articular cartilage
2:42
compared with the medial meniscus.
2:44
About 80% vs. 60%,
2:47
although in discoid lateral meniscus, it's 100%.
2:51
The lateral meniscus is more mobile,
2:53
thus its lower propensity to be injured.
2:57
Lateral meniscal fibers do not directly attach
2:59
to the lateral collateral ligament as their
3:01
medial counterparts do attach to the MCL.
3:06
There's some variability in the meniscofemoral ligaments.
3:09
And most common and notable
3:11
is the anterior meniscofemoral ligament of humphrey.
3:15
Then there is the posterior meniscofemoral ligament
3:18
of Wrisberg, either or both of these come off the
3:22
posterior aspect of the lateral meniscus.
3:24
There is a transverse anterior
3:26
intermeniscal ligament of Winslow.
3:29
And there are various names and some
3:31
unnamed oblique intermeniscal ligaments
3:34
like the ligament of Barkow.
3:37
This diagram,
3:37
taken from the work of Stoller,
3:39
drawn by Salvador Beltran.
3:41
A beautiful diagram demonstrates some of these attachments,
3:46
including the anterior intermeniscal ligament
3:49
of Winslow, going from anterior horn to anterior horn.
3:53
And you can tell which side is which because the
3:56
lateral meniscus is more C-shaped,
3:57
the medial meniscus is more banana-shaped.
4:01
Here's the PCL, a posterior cruciate ligament.
4:03
In front, we have the meniscofemoral ligament
4:06
of Humphrey that we alluded to earlier.
4:08
Behind the PCL is the meniscofemoral ligament of Wrisberg,
4:11
and they are inversely proportional to one another
4:14
in terms of size.
4:16
But they both come off in the same general vicinity
4:19
in the posterolateral meniscus horn near the root.
4:24
There are root ligament attachments to the tibia
4:27
and tibial spines, both laterally and medially,
4:30
in the back and in the front.
4:32
And though not drawn,
4:34
there are intermeniscal ligaments
4:36
that may go from the posterior horn of one
4:38
to the anterior horn of the other
4:40
and these can be problematic.
4:41
The inner tip of the meniscus is not anchored.
4:45
It's freely floating like the wings
4:47
of a stingray or manta ray.
4:49
Whereas, the posterior periphery of the meniscus
4:52
is attached to the capsule more tight on the medial
4:56
side than on the lateral side.
5:00
Tearing of the meniscus roots have often been overlooked.
5:03
Only in the last decade have they been
5:05
recognized as an important cause of other pathology.
5:09
Tears of these roots result in untethering of the
5:13
meniscus and some loss of function and
5:15
alter biomechanics and kinematics.
5:18
The posteromedial meniscus root is the one that is most
5:21
associated with injury, and isolated injury at that,
5:26
and with that, the meniscus becomes untethered, begins
5:29
to extrude medially, and the patient ends up
5:31
with advanced osteoarthritis in later age.
5:36
We said that the meniscus is attached peripherally,
5:39
and here is an upper fascicle and a lower fascicle
5:42
of the lateral meniscus posterolateral corner,
5:46
and these are normal. We'll see later on that these can rapture.
5:49
But the inner portion of the meniscus is floppy,
5:52
it's not attached.
5:54
So, it can bend or be moved around
5:56
by synovial tissue and fluid.
5:59
This is known as meniscal flounce
6:01
as it was described by Zarins.
6:03
Some have proposed that people with hypermobile
6:05
meniscus tips are more prone to meniscal tears,
6:10
although that is the subject of debate.
6:12
Here's a patient that has sustained the valgus injury.
6:14
The amseal is torn, there's an impaction
6:16
injury on the lateral side.
6:17
But I'm showing it for the flounce.
6:20
There is some fluid and synovial thickening
6:23
that is bending and moving the meniscus around.
6:26
Bending it like Beckham.
6:27
Here's the sagittal projection again,
6:29
showing this phenomenon of hypermobility of the free
6:32
edge of the meniscus, known as Flounce,
6:35
not to be confused with a blunt-ended tip tear of
6:39
the meniscus, which is a look-alike.
6:41
There are three critical meniscal functions
6:44
and they are critical.
6:46
No more resecting these small, tiny little tears.
6:49
The menisci serves as stabilizers.
6:52
People that lose their menisci say that
6:54
"My knee feels like it's going to give away."
6:56
It reduces axial load hoop stress.
7:00
And it also improves the overall glide
7:03
and flexibility of the knee,
7:05
so that you have a bigger range of motion
7:07
when your meniscus is preserved.
7:11
Three critical rules.
7:14
No knee meniscus is uniformly black. None.
7:18
They all have water in them.
7:19
Most meniscal tears are not symptomatic
7:22
and are non-surgical.
7:24
The younger the individual,
7:26
the more relevant to clinical
7:27
management is the tear.
7:30
Incidental Meniscal Cleavage Tears
7:32
in the body of adults is extremely
7:35
common over age 60.
7:37
More than 50% of individuals will have them,
7:40
and they will be asymptomatic.
7:43
The meniscus is made up of extracellular matrix,
7:46
70% of which is water.
7:48
So you're going to see water in the meniscus.
7:51
They won't be bright like water,
7:53
it will be diffused water, as we'll see in a moment.
7:56
20% will be collagen.
7:59
And then, the remainder outside the extracellular
8:01
matrix are glycoproteins, proteoglycans,
8:04
and non-collagenous proteins.
8:06
So, what are the causes of meniscal signal?
8:09
Well, the most common cause is physiologic,
8:12
micro diffusion and fluid in the meniscus,
8:15
seen here in green.
8:17
Tears, of course.
8:19
Contusions in children and the outer third vascularity.
8:23
So common.
8:24
A tragic mistake is to intervene on a child for this.
8:29
Cyst.
8:30
Intrameniscal Tears.
8:31
Degeneration.
8:34
CPPD and even Gout,
8:35
and Meniscal Ossicles
8:38
So some of you are wondering how you distinguish some
8:40
of these things, and we're going to spend
8:41
some time talking about that.
8:44
But one of the hallmarks of a tear
8:47
is focality and inflammation.
8:50
Let's take a look at some normal meniscal signal.
8:53
If you squint and look very carefully and stare at this
8:56
T1 spin-echo image,
8:58
you can see
9:00
some gray signal intensity in this meniscus,
9:03
corresponding to the diagram,
9:05
showing this yellowish color in the meniscus,
9:08
which fades as you move into the inner third.
9:11
This is normal
9:13
fluid that lives in the meniscus that travels along
9:16
the radial fibers that are found inside the meniscus.
9:20
These are fibrocartilaginous structures that are
9:23
made mostly of collagen, that consist of a superficial thin
9:26
mesh-like layer, a deeper radial layer,
9:29
and a circumferential layer as well.
9:32
And the radial and circumferential layers,
9:34
the diffusion of fluid produces this,
9:36
and I'm going to show you
9:38
an even clearer example of it in a minute.
9:41
So, what to find is this normal meniscal signal,
9:44
which can be somewhat bright
9:46
on heavily water-weighted sequences.
9:49
It's in the outer third.
9:50
It fades as you go to the middle third,
9:53
it may communicate with the capsule,
9:55
but it never goes up and down.
9:56
It never goes to the superior surface.
9:58
It never goes to the inferior surface,
10:01
it is centric.
10:03
It is not as bright as hyaline cartilage.
10:05
It is not bright on the T2-weighted image,
10:08
and again, it doesn't surface
10:10
superiorly or inferiorly, or in the tip.
10:13
It doesn't go in the inner third and come out the tip.
10:16
This outer third area is vascularized
10:19
and is the zone of respect
10:21
where tears have a high likelihood to heal.
10:25
Here's a coronal projection showing you an ill-defined
10:29
area of increased signal intensity.
10:31
It's as if you are in Alice in Wonderland,
10:34
looking through the glass.
10:36
You can see little structures inside.
10:38
These are collagenous bands that are water-laden.
10:40
Here's some more water around them.
10:42
This is all normal.
10:44
It's fuzzy, it's ill-defined, and that surrounding
10:48
tissues are close to a normal.
10:50
The bone's normal. The cartilage is normal.
10:52
The shape of the meniscus is normal.
10:55
All features that help you decide you're
10:57
looking at normal.
10:58
Normal.
10:59
Normal.
11:00
Sagittal water-weighted image,
11:01
the signal slopes gently down.
11:03
It fades in the middle and inner third.
11:05
By the inner third, it's gone.
11:07
It's fuzzy.
11:08
It's not as bright as as hyaline cartilage.
11:10
It is window-framed all the way around the surrounding
11:14
tissues are coal stone normal.
11:16
This is normal
11:18
meniscal signal.
11:21
Contrast that with this.
11:23
Let's go back for a minute.
11:24
Fuzzy
11:25
sharp edge.
11:27
This is somebody who fell in a creek bank.
11:31
It's a tear.
11:32
Why is it a tear?
11:34
What makes it different than the last example?
11:36
First, the patient has pain right there,
11:39
a posteromedial pain.
11:41
Second, you see they had a bone injury.
11:44
So that helps you.
11:46
Third, it's a little bit swollen.
11:49
Fourth, it doesn't fade.
11:51
It's very focal and then comes to a sudden stop
11:54
instead of fading into the middle third.
11:57
It has a little bit of weird complexity to it.
11:59
The capsule is swollen.
12:01
So, this going to be a hidden tear.
12:03
But it is a tear,
12:04
by a virtue of all those features,
12:07
but especially the focality.
12:11
Now, not everything that produces intrameniscal
12:13
signals are tear, you already know that.
12:15
You know meniscal vascularity can do it.
12:17
Here is a scenario
12:18
where there is signal in the outer third.
12:21
Now, most tears that occur at the outer third are vertical.
12:24
This is horizontal signal.
12:26
And I don't mind if you have some signal
12:27
in the outer third.
12:28
But I do mind when the patient is very symptomatic
12:31
there, and they are.
12:32
I do mind when it's inordinately swollen.
12:35
Look at the superficial MCL bursa.
12:38
I do mind when there are erosions right
12:40
nearby in synovial hypertrophy.
12:43
This is a patient that has the MR manifestations,
12:46
horizontal signal that doesn't fade in the inner third,
12:49
comes to an abrupt hole,
12:51
with erosions,
12:52
with inflammation in the entity of CPPD.
12:55
Another cause of intrameniscal signal.
12:59
Here's a 16-year-old who had a football injury.
13:01
This is a meniscal ossicle or ossification
13:05
in the meniscus.
13:06
It was originally thought these are developmental,
13:08
but we now know that the majority of these occur as
13:12
a result of either a hematoma,
13:14
or sometimes a fragment of bone
13:16
may even get trapped in a torn meniscus
13:18
and the meniscus closes over on it.
13:20
So, the majority of these are acquired
13:23
as opposed to developmental in nature.
13:26
So now we come to a real tear.
13:29
Unlike the normal examples you saw,
13:32
this one is not window-framed.
13:34
There is no dark signal along the underbelly of it,
13:37
on the inferior tibial surface.
13:38
It's got these little fingerlets.
13:40
It's sitting on the surface of the tibia.
13:44
There's a little bit of swelling
13:45
in the posteromedial corner.
13:47
This is what we might refer to as an undersurface
13:50
scuff or rolled edge posteromedial meniscus body horn
13:54
junction or corner tear.
13:55
We'll ignore the intraosseous ganglion for now.
13:58
So now, what you can see,
14:00
we're working our way up the scale.
14:02
We've gone from some normal signals to some
14:05
inflammation, to some examples of intrameniscal tear.
14:11
And now, we have a clear-cut communicating tear
14:14
that's a lot bigger than our scuff
14:16
rolled edge undersurface tear.
14:17
That's a flap tear, it's obliquely oriented.
14:21
This one is not displaced in this position.
14:23
Here's a diagram of it.
14:26
This one involves the inner third, middle third,
14:28
and outer third.
14:29
It goes from the body to the posterior horn.
14:31
And in fact, went all the way to the root.
14:34
And it is key when you're looking at these tears to
14:36
evaluate them in thirds.
14:37
Inner third, middle third, outer third.
14:40
Here, the inner third is involved.
14:42
Here, the middle third is involved.
14:43
Here, the outer third is involved.
14:45
And this helps you decide whether a tear is
14:48
surgical or not.
14:49
A large non-displaced flap tear of
14:52
the medial meniscus.
14:52
Let's talk a little bit about technique.
14:55
What do we like?
14:57
On high field, I like proton density fat supression for detection,
15:00
along with the T1.
15:02
I always use a T1.
15:04
And some of the sequences you're familiar with
15:06
are PD FATSAT, PD SPIR, PD SPAIR, PD SPECIAL, and STIR.
15:12
On older high-field systems
15:13
and some low-field systems,
15:14
I like standard gradient echo and steady-state
15:17
free precession, including gradient recalled acquisition
15:20
in steady-state or GRASS,
15:21
true FISP, field echo, and on Hitachi scanners,
15:25
I love the SARGE,
15:27
which is a type of steady-state free precession.
15:30
For three-dimensional very high-resolution imaging
15:34
on newer high-field scanners, I like additive gradient
15:39
echo, which I can perform with one millimeter cuts
15:42
and reconstruct and look at the axial projection.
15:45
These go by the names of MERGE, MEDIC, M-FFE,
15:49
if you're Philips user, and ADAGE if you're a Hitachi user.
15:53
Here is an example of some of these sequences.
15:56
Here's a proton density fat-suppression,
15:59
heavily water-weighted image.
16:00
On an older system,
16:02
here is a gradient echo,
16:03
a GRASS sequence.
16:05
Pretty nice.
16:06
And it shows the meniscus tear
16:08
in a lovely way with a double meniscus sign anteriorly.
16:10
And here's another heavily water-weighted one,
16:13
the 3D 1 mm additive gradient echo or ADAGE
16:17
showing a large root-to-body meniscus tear.
16:20
These are the most favored nation status sequences
16:24
for meniscal detection, along with the T1.
16:27
Which ones do we no like?
16:29
We don't like the spoiled
16:31
gradient echo sequence that is made on
16:33
some of the older general electric scanners
16:36
because it makes the meniscus too grey
16:38
and too bright, and results in an overcall.
16:41
We don't like the T2 because it's under-sensitive.
16:44
It misses most tears that are scarred or have blood.
16:47
So if you rely on this, you will undercall.
16:50
And then, I don't personally like the proton density
16:53
non-fat suppression image because even though it shows
16:56
meniscal pathology well, it hides bone pathology.
17:00
Which I use frequently to decide on the relevance
17:04
and significance of my tears.
17:07
One special sequence that I rarely use is the radial,
17:11
where I am constantly rotating.
17:12
And perpendicular to the meniscus,
17:14
there is a tear right here.
17:16
But I'm showing it for the technique
17:17
rather than the tear itself.
17:20
This is a specialized view known as the radial series.
17:25
So, let's take a look at a tiny little tear.
17:27
Is that real? Is it flounce?
17:29
Is it volume averaging? Is it synovial tissue?
17:32
Oh, it's small.
17:33
Right at the tip of the posteromedial meniscus
17:36
in a 49-year-old man with pain,
17:38
swelling, and stiffness following an injury.
17:40
This is where the high-resolution images come into play.
17:43
In the axial projection, here is your medial meniscus
17:46
banana-shaped.
17:47
Lateral meniscus, C-shaped.
17:49
And right there,
17:50
right there,
17:52
there is your radial tear.
17:53
Let's see if my pen is working today.
17:55
It is. I'm going to draw right over it
17:57
so you can see it.
17:58
And now, I'm going to take it away.
18:00
Radial tears are a type of vertical tear that is
18:03
radially oriented to the arc of the meniscus.
18:05
There it is at low field. No less.
18:09
Let's take a look at the meniscus and
18:12
divide it up into thirds.
18:15
Well, first, when we look at the anterior horn,
18:17
body, and posterior horn, you could divide the meniscus
18:20
up that way into a third,
18:21
a third,
18:22
a third.
18:23
Same thing on the medial side as the lateral side.
18:25
But there's another way to divide it,
18:28
inner third, middle third, and outer third.
18:30
And I use them both.
18:31
And I use both as descriptors.
18:33
So whenever I have a tear,
18:35
I say whether it's in the anterior horn,
18:36
horn body junction, body posterior body horn junction,
18:40
or posterior horn.
18:41
And whether it is in the white-white zone, inner third,
18:44
red-white zone, middle third,
18:45
or red-red zone, outer third.
18:48
The outer third tears are usually vertical with pivot-shifts.
18:51
Living in the middle third, usually buckets.
18:55
Living in the inner third,
18:57
radials, flaps and parrot beaks live here.
19:01
There are three,
19:03
count of three basic tear shapes.
19:05
So don't get too discouraged,
19:07
vertical, horizontal, and complex.
19:09
Vertical, this includes the bucket.
19:13
Yup, that's a type of vertical tear.
19:15
The radial and the longitudinal vertical.
19:18
Horizontal tears.
19:19
These include traumatic and degenerative cleavage tears.
19:23
And then everything else, I lump into the complex.
19:26
Here's not all of them.
19:27
I'm not showing you a horizontal one.
19:29
But here's a few of them.
19:30
Here is the longitudinal vertical tear.
19:33
Parallel is the peripheral axis of the meniscus.
19:37
And here's another vertical tear.
19:39
This one comes from the inside out.
19:41
It's perpendicular to that one,
19:44
radial, vertical longitudinal.
19:47
Both vertical tears.
19:49
Now, if you take a vertical tear and you put it in the
19:52
middle of the meniscus, in the red-white zone, and then
19:56
it starts to widen, you get yourself a bucket-handle tear.
19:59
And here is an example of a flap tear.
20:02
Here is a baby flap tear with complex obliquity,
20:06
found in the anterolateral body horn junction,
20:08
called the parrot beak tear.
20:10
And here's a flap tear that has rotated posteriorly or
20:14
folded posteriorly,
20:15
the so-called folded displaced flap tear.
20:19
This is a very important thing to recognize
20:21
along with the bucket,
20:22
because these are surgical signs.
20:24
Here's a sagittal projection showing you
20:26
several folded flap tears.
20:28
Look at this one.
20:30
Folded backward, ripped off.
20:31
This one folded over on itself.
20:33
This one folded making a meniscal sandwich.
20:36
The folded flap tear,
20:38
usually going from anterior to posterior.
20:40
But it can fold in the opposite direction.
20:45
So, here's a vertical longitudinal tear.
20:46
You've already seen the vertical radial tear.
20:49
And in the vertical longitudinal tear,
20:50
it's usually in the outer third.
20:52
This one happens to be in the middle third.
20:53
It's got slight obliquity to it,
20:56
but you can see the analogy with the diagram
20:59
right here.
21:00
Most of these vertical longitudinal tears that occur
21:03
in the middle or outer third are left alone.
21:06
There's the radial tear.
21:08
Radial tear also vertical,
21:10
but this one going from the inside out.
21:12
We frequently pay attention to its gap,
21:14
how wide is it right there and we'll measure it.
21:16
How deep is it?
21:18
Not how deep is your love,
21:19
how deep is the tear?
21:21
It is said that tears over 8 mm in depth
21:23
should be operated on.
21:26
I am far more conservative than that,
21:28
even though I'm not making that decision.
21:30
Radial tears,
21:31
when they are near full depth,
21:33
usually have to be dealt with.
21:35
But not all the time,
21:36
the 8 mm rule is not hard and fast for depth.
21:39
But here we have the radial tear,
21:41
sagittal projection.
21:42
Normal meniscus.
21:44
Normal meniscus.
21:45
Defect.
21:46
Defect.
21:48
The rest of the meniscus.
21:50
The rest of the meniscus.
21:52
The radial tear seen as a defect
21:54
when you image it on en face.
21:56
If the tear was over here,
21:58
then you would see it in the coronal projection
22:00
as a defect.
22:02
A horizontal tear,
22:03
that one's easy,
22:04
self-explanatory.
22:06
Over 50% to 60% of all people over age 60 have this.
22:10
A horizontal cleavage tear of the
22:12
lateral meniscus body.
22:14
You don't operate on these.
22:16
They are so common.
22:17
They are frequently associated with osteoarthritis
22:20
and degenerative joint disease.
22:22
But sometimes, they can exist all by themselves
22:25
and still be asymptomatic.
22:28
Here's a radial tear.
22:29
But instead of being a small defect,
22:31
now you can analyze its shape.
22:33
It looks like a crab.
22:35
It's a complex radial tear.
22:37
So from walking on it,
22:39
it's getting mashed.
22:40
Here it is getting mashed.
22:42
So, complex radial would do very well on this one cut.
22:46
It's only in the inner third.
22:47
But on this next cut,
22:48
it's in the inner, middle, and outer third.
22:51
He's a 41-year-old man.
22:52
He's been symptomatic for some time with this tear.
22:55
And it's going to have to be, unfortunately, resected.
22:58
Which usually results in arthritis within six months,
23:01
but you have no choice.
23:03
Here's a complex tear.
23:06
Complex is easy.
23:07
It's anything that you can't simply
23:09
define as horizontal, vertical, or flap-like.
23:13
There, and even flap tears are considered complex.
23:16
But this one goes in many different directions.
23:18
It goes horizontal.
23:19
It goes vertical.
23:20
It goes up. It goes down.
23:22
And because of its size,
23:25
it has contributed to instability of the knee,
23:30
and eventually, that meniscus has pulled away
23:32
from its attachment posteromedially,
23:34
and we're starting to develop meniscal capsular detachment
23:37
from this complex tear.
23:40
Here's another type of complex tear.
23:42
This is a baby flap tear.
23:45
It's got a complex obliquity.
23:47
Let me see if I can draw it for you.
23:49
Here's a meniscus right here.
23:50
Let's see if I can make it 3D.
23:53
Here we go.
23:54
And this tear looks like the snout of a bird.
23:57
It can go this way.
23:58
It can go this way.
24:00
Not only is it curved,
24:01
when you look at it from the top as you dive into
24:03
the meniscus, it also has a curvature, as well.
24:06
Now when you image it,
24:07
you're going to see it, with successive cuts,
24:10
you're gonna see it march towards the
24:13
inside of the meniscus.
24:15
The so-called meniscal marching sign.
24:17
So, let's take a look.
24:18
There is a meniscus.
24:19
It's marching inward,
24:21
it's marching inward,
24:23
it's gone.
24:25
So when you see that, you know that your
24:26
tear has an obliquity to it.
24:30
These are thin tears that,
24:31
like the anterolateral body horn junction,
24:34
they're curved in multiple projections.
24:36
They look like the snout of a bird.
24:38
It's the parrot beak tear.
24:39
Here's another one.
24:41
This one perhaps doesn't show the
24:42
curves as well as I would like,
24:43
but it is in the typical anterolateral body horn junction.
24:46
There it is right there.
24:47
It looks just like a radial tear.
24:49
The axial projection,
24:50
you can see how it tapers.
24:51
Just like the snout of a parrot.
24:53
There it is right there.
24:55
Ooh, that's pretty.
24:56
Maybe a little more curve would
24:57
be nice, but I think you get the picture.
25:00
Meniscal Chronicity.
25:03
Unfortunately, as we age,
25:06
we get a little dehydrated.
25:08
Why do you think the salesperson
25:09
shows you pediatric MRI
25:11
when they're trying to sell you a scanner?
25:12
Because kids have more water.
25:14
The pictures are prettier.
25:16
Because you're measuring the amount
25:18
of protons in the body
25:19
when you make an MRI image.
25:21
When you're older, you dry out, and when you dry out,
25:24
things start to crack.
25:26
This is bad news.
25:27
And as they start to crack, they cleave.
25:30
This is very common for menisci.
25:33
And over time, the meniscus may macerate.
25:35
So, you're not going to go in and resect this.
25:38
The patient needs a joint replacement.
25:41
So, doesn't so much matter what you say as long
25:44
as you understand what you're doing,
25:46
that you don't force an unnecessary procedure.
25:49
There's...
25:49
Oh, wait.
25:50
We will describe it as degenerative joint disease.
25:53
We will Kellgren Lawrence grade it.
25:56
You can google this and learn the Kellgren Lawrence
25:58
grading system, which I urge all you young
26:01
radiologists to do since it's an important plain film
26:04
grading system and I apply it to MRI.
26:07
I usually describe menisci like this
26:09
as medial compartment failure
26:11
when they have OA, penetrating erosions,
26:14
no cartilage replaced by synovium,
26:17
and a macerated meniscus that is extruded medially.
26:20
So, my conclusion will read medial compartment failure
26:24
with failed medial meniscus
26:25
and extensive diffused chondromalacia,
26:29
with grade 3-4 delamination.
26:31
Meniscal Cysts.
26:33
These are actually pretty common.
26:36
The ones on the lateral side are smaller,
26:40
they are more anterior,
26:41
and they're more often painful.
26:44
The ones on the medial side
26:46
are more often posterior.
26:48
They are more often giant,
26:49
and they're more often painless.
26:51
This one happens to be small.
26:54
It's a child with open growth plates.
26:57
This case illustrates what I have
26:58
referred to over the years
27:00
as the meniscal arrow sign.
27:02
Those of you that understand the sport of wrestling,
27:04
especially our friends from Russia and
27:07
Iran where wrestling is a huge sport,
27:09
there's a lot of flexion of the leg that takes place.
27:12
So, there's a lot of what I call compressive axial load tears.
27:15
The meniscus develops
27:17
what I call a traumatic split.
27:19
And with that split, the diffusion event that
27:22
normally takes place becomes accelerated.
27:25
And that diffused synovial fluid gets loculated as a
27:30
small, peripheral, parameniscal cyst that comes
27:33
right smack dab out of the center.
27:37
The so-called meniscal arrow sign.
27:39
Right out of the tip of the arrow comes the tear,
27:42
and right at the tip is your small ball-like meniscal cyst.
27:48
Contrast that with this patient,
27:50
an adult, growth plates closed.
27:52
Now fifty years of age.
27:54
I call this the under-over sign.
27:57
Our tear comes right out of the center of the meniscus,
27:59
but not this lesion.
28:00
It comes from underneath the meniscus.
28:03
It's got pressure.
28:05
It's moving structures out of the way.
28:08
There's not a lot of joint fluid,
28:09
which makes a capsular synovial cyst unlikely.
28:12
There's no synovium.
28:14
It's loculated.
28:15
It's a ganglion pseudocyst.
28:19
Let's talk about meniscal instability.
28:25
Here are some signs that, taken together,
28:28
support the diagnosis of meniscal instability.
28:32
Each one by itself not necessarily, although
28:35
some are more important than others.
28:38
But here are the things I look at
28:39
to decide how aggressive
28:41
I'm going to be in my dictation:
28:43
length greater than 45 cm,
28:45
complex shape,
28:47
diminished volume or height,
28:50
displacement, extrusion, fragmentation,
28:54
folding like you saw earlier.
28:56
Inflammation,
28:58
swelling of the capsule,
28:59
swelling of the tear,
29:02
associated ligamentous laxity
29:04
makes smaller tears more relevant.
29:07
Is it trizonal?
29:08
Outer third, middle third, inner third.
29:11
Radial depth, as we said earlier.
29:12
Greater than 8 mm.
29:14
Is it gapped or widened?
29:17
Here's an example of an unstable tear
29:20
that has to be dealt with surgically.
29:23
The sign known as the comma sign.
29:25
The meniscus is extruding out and down.
29:28
There's your comma right,
29:29
there with a large complex flap tear
29:32
that is traveling with the meniscus as it should,
29:35
and associated inflammation.
29:38
So if you have a comma sign,
29:40
then you also have an apostrophe sign.
29:43
We look at this coronal water-weighted image
29:45
and we say, "Well, where's the meniscus?"
29:47
It's too small.
29:48
The most common cause of a small meniscus
29:50
is meniscectomy, but they've had no surgery.
29:54
Another common cause is inflammatory
29:57
autodigestion, as in, RRA.
29:59
Neither one exists here.
30:01
The meniscus has gone fishing out into the
30:04
parafemoral gutter as the meniscal apostrophe sign.
30:08
Another example of an unstable meniscus tear.
30:13
So, all of those features can be used to help you
30:17
make intelligent, cogent, thoughtful decisions about
30:22
how to word and discuss the case with your clinician.
30:25
Your job is to make the clinician look good.
30:28
What are the factors that determine
30:29
surgery besides those?
30:31
Patient Age.
30:32
Much more likely to operate on somebody 25 than 65.
30:36
Patient activity level.
30:38
Kind of sport are they doing.
30:40
Other symptoms on the same side as the tear.
30:44
It won't operate on a medial tear
30:45
when the symptoms are lateral.
30:47
They have locking.
30:48
Are there cysts?
30:50
Are there signs of instability
30:52
like we described in the prior slide?
30:55
One of the most important that you just simply
30:58
cannot miss, is a bucket handle tear in a youth,
31:03
and associated ligamentous pathology
31:06
Here's an example of a tear
31:07
in a young person that we would operate on.
31:09
Goes all the way from the root into the horn body junction.
31:14
It's thick.
31:15
There is extensive inflammation.
31:18
And on the sagittal T1,
31:20
it is complex and it is the locus
31:23
where the patient's symptoms are.
31:24
So cleaning this up
31:26
with a trimming and a sowing of the middle and outer third
31:29
is totally appropriate.
31:31
And you've already seen an example of a meniscus cyst
31:34
previously, so we're not going to talk about that again.
31:37
But here is an example of a patient with a small tear.
31:42
The posteromedial corner, right there, is swollen.
31:45
There's some horizontal signal in the meniscus
31:47
that's not that impressive.
31:49
As you go to the coronal adage,
31:51
which is a 3D 1.2 mm slice thickness,
31:55
and you see the signal,
31:57
and you say,
31:57
"Hm. That's a lot brighter than the lateral meniscus."
31:59
Well, normally,
32:00
the medial does have more signal
32:03
than the lateral meniscus because of the normal
32:06
valgus angulation of the knee.
32:07
But right there, it's going up to the superior surface.
32:11
It's going down to the inferior surface,
32:14
and you have evidence of ligamentous microinstability.
32:17
There's a pericruciate ganglion pseudocyst
32:21
that augments your diagnosis
32:23
and supports the notion that
32:26
you might have to intervene on this very small
32:28
tear in a young individual.
32:31
Buckets.
32:34
Well, one very clear-cut sign of a bucket,
32:36
seen in this 34-year-old with right knee pain and locking,
32:39
is the double PCL sign.
32:42
Another sign of a bucket handle tear
32:45
is a double meniscus sign.
32:50
But what is a bucket?
32:52
A bucket is a tear
32:55
that usually occurs in the middle third of the
32:58
meniscus, although it can occur in the outer third,
33:01
but it's a longitudinal vertical tear,
33:04
and then it starts to widen.
33:06
I have many cases of performance athletes that
33:10
start out with virtually
33:13
profound symptoms.
33:14
But in MRI, that is almost normal.
33:16
And all they have in the very beginning,
33:19
I can think of two hockey goalies where this has happened,
33:21
is the tiniest thin little sliver tear.
33:23
Right about here.
33:25
And then one day, as they're trying to do the split
33:28
to block a puck from going in the net,
33:30
they feel a pop, and they come in,
33:32
and now they've got this.
33:34
They've got a full-blown separation of this,
33:38
And the inner portion migrates inward.
33:41
Now, sometimes the front of this bucket,
33:44
here's the pitcher, here's the spout,
33:46
here's the handle of the bucket.
33:49
Sometimes the front part will come off.
33:52
So, it'll be free in the front.
33:53
Sometimes the back part will come off.
33:56
Sometimes both the front and the back will come off.
34:00
Let me change color
34:00
so you can see it a little better.
34:02
And then you have what we call
34:03
a bucket-free fragment.
34:05
Sometimes this inner piece will tuck up and squidge up
34:10
underneath the parrot meniscus, push it forward.
34:13
Sometimes this will break
34:14
and go over the top of the main meniscus.
34:17
Either one of these can create the double meniscus sign.
34:22
Here is an example.
34:24
You're right at the front here. You're right there.
34:26
So you're seeing free-edge meniscus.
34:29
That.
34:30
Defect.
34:31
That.
34:32
And then the rest of the fragment.
34:35
That.
34:36
Then you start to get into the heart of the tear.
34:39
Fragment.
34:40
Hole.
34:40
Fragment.
34:42
Fragment.
34:43
Hole.
34:43
Fragment.
34:44
Fragment with a flap tear in the rim.
34:47
So important because you've got to deal with that
34:49
if you're gonna sow it back together.
34:51
So you have to describe the rim.
34:52
How deep is the rim?
34:56
Rim torn itself.
34:58
And there is your fragment sitting underneath
35:00
the posterior cruciate ligament,
35:02
a bucket handle tear.
35:05
In the axial projection,
35:06
let's take a look at our bucket handle.
35:08
There's one part of the bucket.
35:10
There it is on the diagram.
35:11
Here's a big giant hole.
35:13
There's a big giant hole.
35:14
There is the inner portion of the bucket.
35:16
There is the inner portion of the bucket.
35:17
And there's volume averaging of the native meniscus
35:20
in the bucket.
35:21
Having trouble separating them,
35:22
but not now.
35:24
That's the native meniscus
35:26
That is the tear. So the tear is actually
35:29
the inner fragment has done this.
35:32
Sorry, the inner fragment has done this.
35:33
Let me use my drawing tool properly.
35:37
It's come in and it is this right here,
35:40
underneath the native meniscus.
35:41
Then here is the native meniscus right there.
35:45
And although not shown on this one cut,
35:47
the rest of the meniscus is in the
35:48
back with a very thin rim.
35:50
So the back part has detached or has a very thin pedicle
35:54
and it's shoved itself right underneath
35:56
the native meniscus, and now you can see it.
35:59
Let's see if I can take it away.
36:00
Ignore this red line right there.
36:02
There is your native meniscus.
36:04
There's your transverse meniscal ligament of Winslow.
36:06
And there is your displaced bucket that's stuck up
36:10
underneath the native meniscus.
36:13
Pseudo buckets.
36:15
Pseudo buckets include fragments of the ACL,
36:19
the menisco-femoral ligament of Humphrey
36:22
may have a large anterior footprint insertion,
36:26
maybe volume average.
36:27
There's a pseudo bucket bodies and volume averaging
36:30
of cordicated spurs.
36:32
Here's an example.
36:34
A series of coronals.
36:36
Lateral. There's the fibula, medial.
36:40
There, by the way, is the anterior Humphrey bundle,
36:43
right there,
36:44
which is sometimes confused with a bucket.
36:46
It's not.
36:47
But what's that?
36:49
And that?
36:50
And that?
36:53
And that?
36:53
Very reminiscent, wouldn't you say,
36:56
of our previously shown bucket
36:57
handle tear in this 51-one-year-old man
37:00
with pain and instability?
37:03
But the reason this is here is because the ACL is not there.
37:06
Here's the ACL, folded over on itself.
37:10
The ACL is being volume averaged as a potential
37:13
fragment in the notch of the knee.
37:16
And you see the buckling of the PCL
37:19
consistent with ACL-deficient knee.
37:23
Let's turn our attention now to something
37:25
that's a little bit challenging.
37:26
But that's why we're all here
37:28
in the middle of the day
37:29
to think, to learn, to apply.
37:34
Meniscus attachments include roots, rips, and ramps.
37:39
We're going to talk about anterior and posterior root injuries
37:43
and the anatomy of the roots, also medial
37:47
injuries to the meniscofemoral and tibial attachments,
37:50
known as the coronary ligament,
37:52
the meniscotibial attachment.
37:54
We'll talk about the posterolateral meniscal fascicles.
37:57
Remember, I showed you two very delicate normal ones earlier.
38:01
And then we'll show you posturomedial corner injuries
38:03
that involve the posterior oblique ligament
38:06
detachment of the meniscus.
38:08
And then finally, some anterolateral,
38:11
very challenging variations of the meniscus root
38:15
and its interdigitations.
38:17
Let's start out with what I think is the simplest,
38:19
the meniscal femoral and tibial attachments,
38:23
this one known as the coronary ligament.
38:26
There is also, not going to be shown today,
38:28
a meniscopatellar ligament anteriorly.
38:32
So, here's our meniscus.
38:33
It's a T2.
38:34
I don't like T2 imaging for menisci,
38:36
as stated earlier. But I do like it for ligaments.
38:39
And there is your meniscotibial coronary ligament.
38:45
It is squidged up, its crimped,
38:48
it's retracted, it's wavy.
38:51
You can see the tear right there,
38:53
a meniscotibial ligament tear.
38:58
Here's a meniscofemoral ligament tear.
39:00
Should have a nice firm attachment to the femur.
39:03
No, it doesn't.
39:05
See, it's off right there and right there.
39:10
And then as you get more anteriorly,
39:11
you get into the meniscopatellar ligament.
39:13
That's a 29-year-old who felt a pop
39:15
while working out.
39:16
Remember, the deep portion of the MCL
39:19
is contiguous with these meniscotibial
39:23
and femoral attachments.
39:24
Not so on the lateral side
39:27
where the LCL or fibular collateral
39:28
ligament is a structure onto itself.
39:32
Meniscal roots.
39:36
Let's start out with the anteromedial root.
39:38
The medial meniscus anterior root inserts along the tibial
39:40
eminence and tear to the ACL and contacts directly
39:44
the posterolateral bundle of the ACL.
39:48
It's the root with the largest insertion footprint
39:51
and it has a low injury incidence.
39:54
The medial meniscus root is often contiguous with
39:58
the intermeniscal ligament,
39:59
AKA the transverse meniscal ligament of Winslow.
40:03
And you saw that in the bucket handle tear shown earlier.
40:08
Posteromedial root.
40:10
It's the least mobile root.
40:13
A great deal of force is transmitted to the
40:16
posterior horn in ninety degrees of flexion.
40:20
Stress in flexion, combined with relative immobility
40:24
results in the highest incidence of root tears
40:26
in the posteromedial root.
40:29
Let's have a look.
40:31
Here's a young patient.
40:32
Although the growth plates are close.
40:34
Under age 20.
40:35
There's the lateral meniscus and the gorgeous root.
40:38
It fans out there,
40:39
the little root ligaments attaching there.
40:42
And they get a little thicker on subsequent slices.
40:46
There's no inflammation.
40:47
But on the opposite side, on the medial side,
40:50
the most common place to see a root tear,
40:51
the posteromedial root.
40:53
Chop-chop.
40:55
Somebody went in there with a butter knife and cut it.
40:57
It's blunt, there's nothing attaching it anymore.
41:00
It's squared off, it's no longer fanned,
41:04
and there's swelling around it.
41:06
What will happen next?
41:08
Nothing good.
41:09
It will start to untether,
41:11
start to displace as the patient stands
41:13
and runs and performs, and eventually it will extrude.
41:17
The patient will go on to premature osteoarthritis.
41:21
This particular type of tear is categorized
41:23
as a LaPrade 4.
41:25
We'll discuss that in a few moments.
41:28
Here's another...
41:29
Actually, the same patient.
41:30
Sagittal projection demonstrating
41:32
what I call the ghost meniscus.
41:34
You should not see the meniscus suddenly disappear.
41:37
It should gradually disappear.
41:38
So if I perform a series of sagittal slides like this,
41:42
the meniscus should get smaller and smaller,
41:45
but it shouldn't disappear all in one cut.
41:49
And that's what's happening here.
41:50
Let's take a look.
41:52
We see it.
41:53
Now you see it,
41:54
now you don't.
41:56
It should just get
41:58
a smaller triangular shape
42:00
as you go successively into the midline.
42:03
It's not.
42:04
Sudden disappearance of the meniscus,
42:06
a tip-off of a large full-depth root tear.
42:12
LaPrade and others have classified
42:14
five types of root tears.
42:17
I don't have any dreams of you
42:20
memorizing this at this time.
42:22
It's here as a reference,
42:24
but it's just showing you what's important.
42:26
Type 1 is the partial radial root tear
42:28
or any tear in the adjacent posterior
42:31
horn or body region closed by.
42:33
Type 2.
42:34
A complete radial root tear
42:36
of which there are three subtypes and they divide them
42:39
up into those that are right next to the root,
42:42
1-3 mm from the root,
42:43
3-6 mm from the root.
42:46
Here's an example of a 2A,
42:48
right at the root.
42:49
There it is right there in the expected place,
42:52
the posteromedial root.
42:54
They look similar, but different.
42:56
This one fans out, there is no white line.
42:59
There is a white line in the 69-year-old.
43:03
Now, interestingly, the patient's pain was lateral
43:06
rather than medial.
43:08
Here is another one.
43:10
This is one that demonstrates meniscal ghosting.
43:14
We look at the meniscus, it's getting smaller.
43:16
It's getting smaller.
43:17
And then suddenly, bam!
43:18
It's gone.
43:20
That's a tip-off that you're dealing with
43:21
the root tear. Here's another one.
43:24
This one is about 3-6 mm from the root tear.
43:27
There's the root.
43:27
There's the root ligament.
43:29
There's the tear, and there's the rest of the meniscus.
43:33
So what's important here with regard
43:34
to these LaPrade tears?
43:36
Where are they resigned?
43:37
How close are they to the root?
43:40
Do they involve the meniscus?
43:43
The meniscus and the ligament?
43:45
Just the ligament?
43:47
In terms of their depth,
43:49
when you're looking at the root,
43:50
let's look at the sagittal projection for a minute.
43:53
How deep are they?
43:54
Do they involve just the inner third,
43:57
the inner and middle third?
43:58
Or do they involve all three thirds?
44:01
And this improves your ability to use one of these
44:04
grading systems or to simply describe.
44:08
And if you're looking in the coronal projection
44:10
and you have a meniscus like this,
44:13
you have a big gap tear right here.
44:16
This is, in some ways,
44:17
a form frost of a bucket handle-like tear.
44:20
We would call that a LaPrade 3.
44:22
But again, I'm not here to have you memorize
44:24
a grading system,
44:25
simply to understand what's important.
44:27
Where it is relative to the root?
44:29
Are the ligaments involved?
44:32
How deep is that root tear?
44:34
Because that affects how untethered
44:36
the knee is going to be.
44:37
Look at this one.
44:38
This one is right on the root. It's huge.
44:40
It's got a very large gap, never mind the grade.
44:43
It's got a very large gap.
44:46
We could see there is a continuation of it on the next slice.
44:49
The patient has developed chondromalacia.
44:52
The lateral compartment looks fine,
44:54
but the medial compartment looks awful.
44:56
There's osteoarthritis with spurs.
44:58
There's chondromalacia.
45:00
And look what's happened,
45:01
the root tear has become a closed flap.
45:05
And the rest of the meniscus?
45:07
The meniscus is now untethered; it's extruded.
45:10
There's no support, and the patient has developed
45:13
premature OA at age 56.
45:16
LaPrade 5, by the way, is an avulsion
45:19
fracture of the tibial plateau.
45:20
But the bottom line is how deep
45:22
relationship to the root,
45:24
relationship to the ligament.
45:27
Is there a closed extension?
45:28
Is the meniscus now untethered?
45:30
Is the meniscus extruded?
45:32
And if so, where?
45:35
The anterolateral attachment or root.
45:38
This one is pretty challenging.
45:41
It's the most challenging of all.
45:44
Look at this sagittal high-resolution T1 image,
45:47
and you would think this was a tear at first glance.
45:52
The posterior horn is pretty dark.
45:55
But what is all this heterogeneous signal
45:58
intensity in the anterior root?
46:01
Well, some of it, like that,
46:02
is synovial interdigitation.
46:05
Some of it...
46:06
This triangle right here represents the transverse
46:09
meniscal ligament of Winslow.
46:12
This horizontal gray signal right here represents an
46:16
interdigitation of the anterolateral root ligament,
46:20
which is quite long.
46:22
This is the anterolateral meniscosynovial recess.
46:26
So some of you, on this 0.6 mm thick image
46:29
are saying to yourselves,
46:31
"Well, how will I ever tell if there's a tear?"
46:34
Well, I'm going to give you a couple of clues
46:36
that will help you deal with this area,
46:39
and fortunately, it's an area that we often leave alone
46:43
and don't necessarily operate on.
46:45
It does better.
46:48
Then some of the other meniscal areas with a
46:51
conservative approach.
46:52
Let's take this 27-year-old man
46:54
with anterior and medial pain.
46:57
I highlighted anterior and medial for a reason.
47:00
It's worst over the last year. The injury is chronic.
47:03
What is causing the pain?
47:06
Look at that anterolateral root.
47:08
It's fuzzy.
47:10
Interdigitation of synovium.
47:13
Transverse meniscal ligament of Winslow right there,
47:16
more interdigitation.
47:17
Let's keep looking.
47:19
The next cut going towards the periphery,
47:22
vertical signal.
47:22
But we're still in very deep.
47:24
And what is all this?
47:26
It's synovitis in the midline.
47:28
It's a synovial reaction.
47:30
So, is this tear causing the pain?
47:33
Whatever is causing the pain is producing medial pain.
47:36
So it's more likely to be from this midline
47:39
near medial synovitis than it is the tear.
47:43
Let's take a look at this signal.
47:45
It persists for one more cut.
47:48
And then perhaps maybe for a fourth cut,
47:50
but it's not very deep.
47:52
So the truth of the matter is,
47:54
as you get out to the periphery, the thing is gone.
47:58
So when you're looking at the anterolateral meniscus,
48:01
if that vertical signal or complex signal that you're seeing
48:04
doesn't go out to the body,
48:08
I tend to dismiss it.
48:09
And how do I dismiss it?
48:11
I describe it as synovial interdigitation
48:15
anterolateral meniscus root injury
48:17
without displaced macromeniscus
48:21
or unstable macromeniscus tear.
48:23
Now, if it comes all the way out into the body
48:27
and the symptoms correspond,
48:29
I will approach it much differently.
48:31
So use a combination of the clinical and the
48:34
presence of a root injury that propagates
48:37
to make my decision.
48:40
The posterolateral attachments.
48:42
You already saw those two small little fascicles
48:45
that come off the posterior horn.
48:47
So here's the posterior horn of the lateral meniscus.
48:49
Here's an upper fascicle and a lower fascicle.
48:51
They're thin, they're dark, they're delicate,
48:54
and where are they?
48:55
They are gone.
48:57
There's not one over here.
48:59
There's certainly not one over here
49:00
where it's blunt-ended.
49:03
Again, blunt-ended.
49:05
These are typically seen in patients who have had a
49:07
pivot shift, frequently associated with vertical tears
49:12
or Wrisberg rips of the posterolateral meniscus.
49:16
An example of a fascicular detachment of the
49:19
lateral meniscus post superiorly
49:21
and inferiorly in a pivot shift.
49:24
The posteromedial attachments.
49:28
There are several small short unnamed
49:31
detachments to the posterocapsule.
49:33
There is one that's recognized called
49:35
the inferior meniscotibial ligament.
49:39
This is variably seen depending upon
49:41
the resolution of your imaging.
49:44
Also helping to stabilize the posteromedial corner
49:48
is the semimembranosus attachment and a tip of
49:53
ligament that attaches in the
49:54
posterosuperior quadrant called the POL
49:57
or Posterior Oblique Ligament of the knee.
50:00
So it gets a little complex.
50:02
Here's a child.
50:03
All those short unnamed detachments,
50:05
those are easy. They don't have a name.
50:07
All you need to do is look for swelling, synovitis, blood.
50:11
You have it all.
50:12
Swelling, synovitis and blood.
50:14
You also have a bone injury.
50:16
Where is your menisco inferior tibial ligament?
50:19
Right there.
50:20
And it's attenuator right there.
50:23
Over here, it's torn.
50:24
The inferior meniscotibial ligament is torn.
50:27
The meniscus is blowing out the back.
50:30
When the patient flexes their leg,
50:31
guess what's going to happen?
50:33
The meniscus is going to blow out the back and
50:35
they're gonna end up with premature
50:37
posterior arthritis.
50:38
This is called failure of the brake stop mechanism.
50:43
Here's an example of somebody that has another menisco
50:47
femoral menisco...
50:48
sorry, a posterior meniscocapsular injury.
50:51
This is one we missed about sixteen, fifteen years ago.
50:56
Clinician said, "Have another look at it."
50:58
This kid locks.
51:00
We had another look at it,
51:01
we missed it a 2nd time.
51:03
How humiliating.
51:05
But being humble is good.
51:07
There is the posterior inferior meniscotibial ligament.
51:11
We failed to recognize on one cut
51:13
that
51:15
the upper attachment, the POL attachment,
51:18
or the superior meniscocapsular attachment was gone.
51:22
So when the surgeon went in,
51:24
he could take the meniscus and rotate it on a pedicle.
51:27
That was the pedicle.
51:28
So we failed to recognize this upper attachment injury,
51:33
which was the only finding.
51:35
Now this one, not so difficult.
51:37
18-year-old man,
51:38
trauma while playing basketball,
51:40
difficulty walking.
51:42
Let's walk our way out from the midline
51:44
to the periphery.
51:47
Midline.
51:48
What's that?
51:50
Well, that is a fragment of meniscus and blood.
51:54
But there's your meniscus,
51:54
it should be lining up over here.
51:57
There's your meniscus, there's your tibial edge.
52:00
There's your meniscus, there's your tibial edge.
52:02
There's a hematoma.
52:04
There's your meniscus, there's your hematoma.
52:06
There's your tibial edge.
52:08
And again.
52:09
And again.
52:10
So, when you have greater than a centimeter of
52:12
displacement with a hematoma,
52:15
with a bone injury on successive three or four slices,
52:19
you've got meniscocapsular separation.
52:24
Let's talk about pivot-shift type tears.
52:27
The most common pivot shift type tear is the vertical
52:30
longitudinal tear, either medial or lateral.
52:33
Another very common type of pivot shift tear
52:36
with ACL is the Wrisberg rip tear.
52:40
Let's take a look at the normal ligament
52:42
of Wrisberg and its interface,
52:45
also known as the posterior meniscofemoral ligament.
52:49
So there's the lateral root.
52:52
That is not a fragment of meniscus.
52:54
That is the Wrisberg ligament.
52:58
If you go from the outside to the inside,
53:01
that ligament will move away from the meniscus.
53:04
If you go from the inside to the outside,
53:07
that will move towards the meniscus.
53:09
So that by slice number three of a 3 mm cut,
53:14
that interface right there is gone.
53:17
And it is, it's gone.
53:19
So, the normal Wrisberg interface will look something
53:22
like this, just to highlight it.
53:26
Like that.
53:28
And then this structure, which is the ligament,
53:31
as you go deeper and deeper into the knee,
53:33
will move away from the meniscus.
53:35
As you move to the periphery, closer to the body,
53:38
it will come towards the meniscus,
53:39
and by the time you're on cut three,
53:42
that interface will be gone.
53:45
Here is the posterior meniscofemoral ligament of Wrisberg,
53:50
going from inferolateral to superomedial.
53:55
Let's take a look at a Wrisberg rip.
53:57
So here's our lateral root.
54:00
There our Wrisberg.
54:00
It's a little tiny one this time.
54:02
There's the Wrisberg.
54:04
Here's cut number three,
54:06
and it should now be gone.
54:09
That ligament should be moving towards the meniscus.
54:12
This interface should fade away. It is persisting
54:14
and it's getting bigger,
54:16
and bigger,
54:17
and bigger and changing direction.
54:22
The tear begins at this weakened
54:24
interface between Wrisberg and the meniscus
54:28
and then propagates into the body,
54:30
the Wrisberg rip of ACL deficient knees.
54:35
Ramp lesions.
54:37
The anterior cruciate ligament is the guardian
54:39
of the posteromedial meniscus corner.
54:42
So when you pivot shift, bad things happened here.
54:47
What is a ramp lesion?
54:49
It's a meniscosynovial meniscocapsular
54:53
or peripheral meniscal injury.
54:58
Ramp lesions have been graded.
55:00
Here's a normal meniscosynovial interface.
55:04
There's the meniscus,
55:06
there's the meniscotibial ligament,
55:08
which is usually hidden from the clinicians view
55:11
and it's nice and tight.
55:14
Here is the earliest form of ramp lesion where you tear
55:17
the capsule and/or the synovium outside the meniscus.
55:21
This bleeds.
55:23
In a type II,
55:25
partial tear, outer third of the meniscus, upper surface.
55:27
Type III,
55:29
inferior surface,
55:30
and the meniscotibial ligament
55:32
may be it's ruptured.
55:33
Type IV,
55:35
all the way through.
55:36
Type V,
55:37
a double tear.
55:39
This has been overlooked for so long,
55:42
pivot shift, posterior medial, tibial impaction injury.
55:46
Here's what a pivot shift looks like.
55:48
Right? Tibia goes forward,
55:50
femur goes back, stretchy injury
55:53
capsule tears, fills with blood,
55:56
where's your posterior meniscotibial ligament?
55:58
It's gone.
55:59
There's blood in the capsule,
56:01
but there's no tears in the interstitium
56:04
or body of the meniscus,
56:06
a ramp 1.
56:09
Here's a ramp 4,
56:11
and ramp 4 goes all the way from
56:12
the upper surface to the lower surface,
56:14
and this time, not in the capsule,
56:15
although the capsule is bloody.
56:18
The capsule is injured,
56:19
but there's also a vertical through-and-through
56:22
tear in the outer third of the meniscus.
56:24
A ramp 4 and a ramp 5 is a double tear.
56:27
Blood and gore.
56:30
Diffuse swelling in the posteromedial capsule reflection
56:33
with not one tear,
56:34
but a second tear involving the meniscus
56:37
from the violence of the pivot shift.
56:40
Meniscus Dysplasia.
56:43
Most common form of dysplasia is
56:45
discoid lateral meniscus.
56:47
Lateral to medial ratio is 100 to 1.
56:51
Every patient with the discoid meniscus has
56:53
some form of tibial or femoral dysplasia.
56:57
One of the most common dysplasia is
56:58
hypoplasia of the lateral tibial spine.
57:02
They can get fibular head overgrowth.
57:05
They can get small aneurysms of geniculate vessels,
57:08
absence of the ligament of Wrisberg.
57:11
Common symptomatically is knee locking,
57:14
intra and extra-meniscal cysts are quite common.
57:18
Any signal in a discoid meniscus
57:20
that is not in the outer third
57:22
should be deemed an intrameniscal tear
57:24
to approve otherwise.
57:26
That rule works 100% of the time.
57:31
Now, this meniscus is going all the way in.
57:34
It's covering this hypoplastic tibial spine.
57:37
And on every single coronal cut,
57:40
the meniscus has a long tongue.
57:43
It never tapers into a triangle.
57:47
So it covers 100% of the tibial surface.
57:51
It may be flat, or in this case convex upward
57:54
when you look at it arthroscopically,
57:56
which produces quite a problem
57:58
in terms of knee biomechanics.
58:02
Here's another one.
58:02
Different patient.
58:04
Sagittal view showing discoid lateral meniscus.
58:09
Their signal, not just in the outer third, but it's cyst.
58:12
There's a perimeniscal cyst.
58:14
There is a continuation of that cyst
58:16
all the way into the middle and inner third.
58:18
This one unfortunately had to be resected.
58:22
And on the table,
58:23
it just flopped into two pieces.
58:26
It was already like a cleaving amoeba.
58:30
Any signal that is in the middle or inner third
58:32
should be deemed a tear until proven otherwise.
58:34
Any cystic signal in a discoid meniscus
58:37
should be deemed a tear until proven otherwise.
58:40
50% of all discoid menisci will have an intrameniscal tear.
58:44
It's darn common.
58:46
And dysplasias are frequently overlooked.
58:49
Here's another one.
58:50
Let's have a look. This is medial.
58:53
Our medial meniscus is tapering into
58:55
a nice little triangle, ain't it?
58:57
Here's our triangle.
58:59
But not on the lateral side,
59:01
it just keeps going and going,
59:03
and going, and going, and covers the entire tibia.
59:07
How about the medial femoral condyle?
59:09
It's slightly narrow.
59:11
It should be bigger than the...
59:13
The lateral femoral condyle
59:14
should be bigger than the medial femoral condyle
59:16
in terms of medial-lateral dimension,
59:18
it's not, it's hypoplastic.
59:21
The tibial spine is hypoplastic.
59:24
The patient had a large fibular head, not shown,
59:28
and has another anomaly, an intermeniscal ligament
59:33
that goes to the base of the ACL,
59:36
dysplasia.
59:36
When you see a discoid meniscus,
59:38
hunt for other signs of dysplasia.
59:41
Here is yet another one.
59:43
Medial meniscus, it becomes a triangle.
59:45
Hooray!
59:47
But on the lateral side,
59:48
it just keeps on going.
59:51
And again,
59:52
we have the most common anomaly:
59:54
hypoplasia of the lateral tibial spine.
59:57
And now, look at the slope.
59:59
Look at the dysplasia of the lateral tibia.
60:02
You've seen plenty of tibias in your lifetime already.
60:06
They don't look like that.
60:07
Sloping so steeply from superomedial to inferolateral
60:12
without the usual concavity that you'd like to have.
60:15
You want to see something
60:16
that looks a little bit more like this
60:18
rather than have this flat appearance.
60:20
And also look at the hypoplasia of the femur
60:23
in association with this discoid meniscus.
60:26
That one was Wrisberg deficient, by the way.
60:28
And here is another sign of a discoid meniscus.
60:31
In the sagittal projection,
60:32
you want to see as you go in,
60:34
the meniscus separate into two bowties.
60:37
Sorry, two triangles.
60:39
One in the back,
60:40
and one in the front.
60:42
But in this case, we have a bowtie.
60:45
And the bowtie just simply
60:47
never comes off the tuxedo.
60:49
Bowtie. Bowtie. Bowtie. Bowtie.
60:52
Discoid lateral meniscus.
60:55
So, in summary.
60:59
One of your most important jobs
61:01
is to make a cogent, thoughtful determination of
61:04
whether that meniscal tear is unstable
61:07
and needs intervention, attention,
61:10
or whether you can protect that patient by using
61:13
crafty words like chronic, incidental, small, minuscule
61:18
contralateral to the side
61:20
of the patient's clinical syndrome.
61:21
Save the whales,
61:23
save the menisci.
61:25
Understanding when tears are potentially unstable
61:29
was a focus of this talk.
61:31
Understanding when tears
61:32
may be surgical was included in this talk.
61:36
We also discussed root injuries,
61:40
ramps, and Wrisbergs.
61:42
The latter two, associated with ACL-deficient knees.
61:46
And we gave you some basic classification systems
61:49
for assessing root abnormalities.
61:52
We finished with some variants,
61:54
pitfalls, and dysplasia, like,
61:56
dysplasias like the discoid lateral meniscus.
61:59
At this point,
62:00
I want to thank you all.
62:02
I'll take any questions that you have.
62:03
You can either post your questions by text or chat.
62:09
Perfect.
62:09
Dr. P, I do see a couple of questions
62:11
in the Q&A feature for you.
62:13
You can open that up.
62:15
And just while you're opening that up,
62:16
I just want to say thank you everyone for joining today.
62:18
If you enjoy learning from Dr. Pomeranz,
62:20
please join MRI Online today for access
62:22
to many more courses by him.
62:25
Okay,
62:26
so the first question is how can you diagnose the
62:28
subgroup of discoid menisci,
62:31
such as the incomplete type,
62:33
or the type with Wrisberg's absence?
62:37
So, you have to know how to
62:38
look for the ligament of Wrisberg.
62:40
So you need to go to the posterolateral corner
62:42
and see if there is a Wrisberg deficiency.
62:45
If there is a Wrisberg deficiency,
62:47
then there may be a big Humphrey.
62:49
If there is neither Wrisberg nor Humphrey;
62:50
that is a form of dysplasia.
62:53
And the other thing I do is look at
62:55
the architecture of the bone.
62:56
In a partial discoid meniscus,
62:58
the bone is still going to be dysplastic.
63:00
Do I have a funny slope of the tibia?
63:03
Do I have a hypoplastic femoral condyle?
63:05
And I still look to see...
63:08
hopefully, you can still see the screen.
63:09
I still look to see.
63:10
If the meniscus is too long.
63:11
Now, some types of discoid menisci,
63:14
they go all the way in.
63:15
But they're very, very thin in the inner third,
63:17
so you have to look very carefully.
63:19
And some will go,
63:21
you know, more than 80% of the way in,
63:23
but not 100% of the way in.
63:25
Some discoid menisci are actually perforated;
63:27
have little holes in them.
63:29
So you have to familiarize yourself with
63:30
these variations and understand
63:33
what is too deep. And the only way to do that
63:35
is to look at enough MRs.
63:37
But anything more than 80% coverage of the tibia,
63:41
always abnormal from outside to inside.
63:44
So that 80% rule may help you.
63:46
Is there a clinical significance of meniscal flounce?
63:50
Most important significance is not to confuse
63:52
it with a radial or small parrot beak tear.
63:56
A 2nd important aspect of flounce is some have said
64:01
that patients with hypermobile flouncy menisci are more
64:05
likely to have meniscal tears, although
64:07
this is debated.
64:10
What's the best way to diagnose traumatic tear
64:12
in a 60-year-old versus a degenerative type tear.
64:16
Well, first, degenerative tears are almost always cleavage
64:21
or narrow flap tears.
64:22
They're almost always horizontal in their orientation.
64:25
People with degenerative tears should have DJD.
64:29
They should have either osteoarthritis with spurs,
64:32
chondromalacia, remodeling, partial extrusion.
64:36
In a traumatic tear,
64:38
you want to see inflammation.
64:39
You want to see the tear too thick.
64:41
You want to see swelling of the surrounding capsule.
64:44
You might want to see some displacement,
64:46
some twisting,
64:47
some extrusion, a comma sign,
64:49
an apostrophe sign.
64:51
So all those features that we were discussing
64:53
earlier as they relate to surgery and instability
64:57
you would use to diagnose a traumatic tear
65:00
in a 60-year-old.
65:02
It is pretty easy to diagnose the degenerative tear
65:04
due to the presence of degenerative joint disease,
65:07
the absence of swelling and remodeling of the bone.
65:12
Which is the optimal interslice distance and gap?
65:16
The optimal interslice distance and gap
65:19
is the one that's right for you.
65:21
So there is no answer to that.
65:24
I read low-field MRI's with 4 mm slice thickness all the time.
65:29
If the pulsing sequence is exquisite like the SARGE
65:32
on the old 0.3 Hitachi,
65:35
then I have no problem doing 4 mm cuts.
65:38
On the other hand,
65:38
if my contrast resolution isn't quite as good
65:41
as I would like, I certainly prefer having something
65:44
that is 3 mm or less.
65:47
As far as gap goes,
65:49
I usually go gapless when I can.
65:51
If I'm doing a 3D image,
65:53
I use a 50% overlap.
65:54
But there's nothing wrong at low field with going
65:57
3 gap one or 4 gap one,
65:59
as long as you have the proper contrast resolution.
66:02
Which means you've got to know your scanner,
66:04
then you've got to know which sequences work,
66:07
and I gave you a list of those and which ones do not.
66:10
How successful are surgeons
66:12
at detecting intrameniscal tears?
66:15
Not very successful at all.
66:18
That is one of the reasons why MRI's can be so valuable.
66:22
Fortunately, most intrameniscal tears are
66:25
not symptomatic, but they are more symptomatic
66:28
in people that are more active.
66:30
So, the intrameniscal signal becomes
66:32
a lot more relevant when you're dealing with a 20-year-old
66:35
than when you're dealing with a 65-year-old.
66:39
But that's where MR has great importance, and
66:41
this is especially true in discoid menisci.
66:44
We are trying to let that meniscus right itself out.
66:47
You know, there's nothing you can do.
66:49
You know, meniscal transplantation
66:50
has not had tremendous success,
66:53
so you basically live with that discoid meniscus
66:55
as long as you can,
66:56
but once you start to see cystic degeneration
66:59
of that discord meniscus,
67:01
you know the end is near; if the child or person or
67:04
young person has pain,
67:05
then it's time to take that meniscus out
67:07
and you're stuck in a difficult situation.
67:10
Can we differentiate between prior and current
67:13
injuries to the menisci?
67:15
Well, you can.
67:18
I think part of it is combining history,
67:20
the location of the pain, new onset pain,
67:24
and I always...
67:25
I don't read knees without history.
67:28
If I don't have a history,
67:29
I'm on the telephone asking for the history.
67:32
My colleagues are on the telephone
67:34
asking for the history.
67:35
I am also looking at the degree of swelling.
67:38
A prior injury, going to be less swollen.
67:41
A prior injury, unlikely to have bone edema.
67:44
A prior injury, unlikely to have a chondral flap.
67:47
So I look at all the surrounding tissues to make my
67:50
decision in concert with the correlation of the
67:53
patient's clinical syndrome to decide
67:55
if it's relevant to a recent trauma.
67:59
How different ghost symptoms dramatic and postoperative?
68:04
I don't quite understand this,
68:06
but let me talk about the postoperative
68:07
meniscus for a minute
68:09
because I think that's the question.
68:10
So, when you...
68:13
when you resect the meniscus and didn't
68:15
get into this just due to time,
68:17
and I will do a postoperative meniscus talk for
68:19
you separately at some time in the future,
68:22
the resection is usually a trim.
68:24
So they trim out the inner third of the meniscus.
68:26
And now the meniscus is very truncated
68:30
and that interface right there is very smooth.
68:33
Now over time, the meniscus will usually remodel.
68:36
It becomes a little more curved and rounded.
68:38
So it looks like that.
68:40
Now, I don't mind if I have a small meniscus
68:44
like that and has some signal in it.
68:46
That's okay.
68:48
What will I do with that?
68:49
I'll call that chronic conversion type
68:51
signal in the meniscus remnant.
68:53
If the meniscus is so small that the
68:56
only treatment is resection,
68:58
I always read it conservatively.
69:01
Now let's talk about resection again,
69:05
and let's assume we had a large flap tear.
69:09
They go in and they trim, and they trim,
69:11
and they trim and they say,
69:12
"Okay, we're going to stop right here."
69:15
Why are we stopping right here?
69:16
Because the meniscus
69:17
is getting a little more vascular.
69:18
And I don't want to take this young person's
69:20
entire meniscus out. So they stop.
69:23
And what are they left with? They are left with this?
69:25
They are left with this converted signal, this stable
69:29
outer to middle third signal
69:30
that has been cut right to there.
69:33
So when I have a postoperative meniscus,
69:36
and I see a remnant that's less than 8 mm in depth.
69:40
And I have some horizontal or oblique
69:42
signal in the outer remnant,
69:44
and the remnant is not twisted. It's not extruded.
69:47
It's not displaced.
69:49
There's no comma sign.
69:50
There's no apostrophe sign.
69:52
There's no other signs of acute trauma,
69:54
I'm going to call it postoperative
69:56
meniscal conversion signal.
69:58
And I hardly ever perform MR arthrography to analyze
70:03
this signal intensity in a small remnant
70:06
with sequences most reliable for tear,
70:09
the sequence that is heavily water-weighted.
70:13
So on your scanner, that could be
70:15
proton density STIR , SPIR, SPARE,
70:18
special, and so on.
70:20
Another very water-sensitive
70:22
sequence is the water-weighted gradient echo.
70:26
On older scanners,
70:27
field-echo, gradient recalled echo, steady-state imaging,
70:31
also known as GRASS imaging.
70:33
On some of the newest scanners,
70:35
additive gradient echo known as MEDIC,
70:38
MFFE, ADAGE, MERGE, and others.
70:43
Any plain extra pointers to meniscal injury.
70:46
Well, sure.
70:49
If you got a segond sign, you've...
70:52
injured the lateral capsule,
70:53
you've had a traumatic various insult.
70:56
If you have a reverse segond sign,
70:58
a flake fracture on the medial side,
71:00
you've had a valgus injury.
71:02
If you've got an arcuate sign or you've raptured,
71:04
or fractured the fibular head, then you've got a
71:07
posterolateral corner injury.
71:09
All of those have association with meniscal pathology.
71:13
So, there are enumerable
71:16
but rather profound plain film signs that a meniscal
71:19
injury is likely to be present in concert
71:22
with the ligamentous insult.
71:26
Okay, I think that was our last question.
71:29
I appreciate your attention.
71:30
Thanks to the MRI Online team for having me.
71:33
Have a great day.
71:34
Perfect.
71:35
To bring us close on,
71:36
thank you, Dr. Pomeranz, for your time today,
71:38
and thanks to all of you for
71:39
participating in this Noon Conference.
71:40
A reminder that it will be made available on demand at
71:43
www.mrionline.com,
71:44
in addition to all previous Noon Conferences.
71:46
Be sure to join us on Monday for a lecture
71:49
on imaging of the adrenal glands.
71:51
You can register for that
71:52
the same way you registered for this.
71:53
Thank you and I have a wonderful day.
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