Interactive Transcript
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So we have just finished, in a prior event.
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Yet, talking about the different types of
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tears that can truncate the tip of the labrum,
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analogous to the radial tear of the knee.
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Tears that are elongated, somewhat
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longitudinal along the long axis of the
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labrum, not infrequently dissecting into
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the hyaline space with a hyaline line.
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Uh, an oft-symptomatic tear, tears
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that we see on a more chronic basis,
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that may propagate progressively
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in a straight vertical orientation.
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And now let's add a little bit to
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that vertical orientation concept.
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These vertically oriented tears may sometimes
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burst out and create a paralabral cyst.
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That paralabral cyst may sit underneath the
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capsule, but sometimes the capsule itself
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on a chronic basis or from a remote injury
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may actually tear.
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The tear may be small, and the synovial
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fluid may slowly transgress the capsule
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and create an extracapsular para-meniscal
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pseudocyst or paralabral cyst of meniscal origin.
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So these cysts may be intracapsular, or
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as we see here in pink, extracapsular.
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The intracapsular ones are a little more
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common when you're assessing the labrum.
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It is so critical
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to evaluate the kind of hyaline destruction and
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attenuation that is present and its severity.
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Because the decision to fix the
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labrum is going to be highly dependent
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upon the status of the joint.
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If the joint is, uh, to the point where there is
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moderate to end-stage chondromalacia, nobody's
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going to go in arthroscopically and fix this.
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They're going to do a total hip.
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So you want to look at what type of
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ulcers you have, how many, how broad,
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and how much cartilage loss you have.
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And especially, do you have
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penetration of the subchondral plate?
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And if you do, where is it?
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Now frequently, these areas
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of penetration associated with
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labral tears are right next door.
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They're either under this line, or directly
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adjacent to the labrum, along the tip.
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And that may not be enough to stop labral
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surgery, but it's uncommon to have this as
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just an isolated phenomenon and nothing else.
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But this is still an important observation,
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because it markedly contributes to
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the patient's clinical pain syndrome.
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Another key issue in assessing the
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amount of hyaline loss is the thickness.
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Especially in younger individuals.
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Now, a younger individual should have
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hyaline thickness of the acetabulum combined
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with hyaline thickness of the femoral head
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cartilage, which I haven't shown here.
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And I'm just adding it in green.
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So that these two add up to three millimeters.
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All the way around the hip.
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Now, in some areas, the femoral
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cartilage will be thicker.
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In some areas, the acetabular
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cartilage will be thicker.
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But they will still add up to
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approximately 3 millimeters.
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The other aspect of labral evaluation
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is the assessment of the capsule.
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The capsule is composed in part
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of the iliofemoral ligament.
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Let's take a little light blue approach here.
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There's the iliofemoral ligament.
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And as it courses over the acetabular labral
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complex, there is a little sulcus here.
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And that sulcus gets a little deeper with age.
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As long as it's not more than 2 millimeters
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in a young person, or 3 to 4 millimeters
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in an older person, and there's no
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associated inflammation with it, no cysts,
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no maceration, no edema, I let it slide.
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But if there is either a traumatic injury or
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an elderly individual with an unstable labrum,
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this may progressively detach and separate.
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You're going to see inflammation and fluid track
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for a variable distance on high in here, more
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than three or four millimeters, and you'll see
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the capsule itself, in other words, this tissue
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right here, will swell, you may see tears, you
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may see areas of disruption, you may see damage.
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Paralabral cyst formation underneath
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or over top of the capsule.
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That concludes our discussion of the
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labrum magnified using our diagram.
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If you're following along with us, you may want
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to look at some of the magnified MR images that
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we share with you in our labral assessment.
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Thanks.
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