Interactive Transcript
0:00
It's a 23-year-old with pain after a fall.
0:04
Something familiar, something classic,
0:07
so you ought to be comfortable with this case,
0:10
with one minor exception.
0:12
So, let's start out by scrolling the middle.
0:15
And we are looking at a proton density,
0:18
high quality fat suppression image.
0:20
Although, the TE of 20,
0:22
a little low for my taste.
0:24
I like my TEs to be about 30, 35,
0:27
or 40 for maximal contrast resolution of water
0:32
to background.
0:33
But that being said,
0:35
we do have excellent fat suppression and ispy.
0:39
A pivot shift injury.
0:41
I spy a posterolateral tibial impaction injury,
0:47
an antrolateral femoral terminal sulcus injury,
0:50
and a posteromedial tibial injury.
0:52
So how does that happen?
0:54
It happens with the classic pivot shift mechanism
0:56
of injury. So the tibia is internally rotated,
1:00
the femur is externally rotated.
1:03
The patient may receive a blow to the outside
1:06
of the knee, producing a vagus impact,
1:10
and the tibia glides forward.
1:13
As it glides forward, the femur slams down.
1:17
So if you look from the side,
1:19
the femoral terminal sulcus
1:22
slams down on the tibia,
1:26
and the back of the tibia takes the impact from
1:29
the femur as it glides back on the tibia.
1:32
So that impact can cause a fracture.
1:35
It can tear the back of the meniscus,
1:37
it can tear the meniscocapsular junction.
1:40
And if it's really severe enough,
1:41
the patient may even experience a knee
1:44
dislocation. Usually when that happens,
1:46
the downward impact is not as great.
1:49
There's a little more distraction.
1:51
And in those patients,
1:52
the meniscai are actually normal.
1:55
So if you've got some serious collateral ligament
1:59
and cruciate ligament injuries,
2:01
in the absence of any meniscal pathology,
2:03
but the back of the capsules and corners are
2:05
abnormal. Should worry about a knee dislocation.
2:08
But these are the typical pivot shift mechanism,
2:12
bony injuries.
2:14
And we also have typical meniscal injuries because
2:19
we are taking the tibia and we are just driving
2:22
it forward, the femur backwards,
2:24
and the capsule just can't take the distraction,
2:29
so the capsule bleeds.
2:31
That's blood in the capsule.
2:33
So there's a meniscocapsular sprain.
2:36
That happens with almost every pivot shift injury.
2:40
There's even a small vertical tear next to
2:43
the sprain. I'll blow it up for you,
2:45
in case you don't believe me.
2:47
There it is.
2:48
Now let's go over to the lateral side.
2:51
And by the way,
2:52
this is the insertion inflection point of the pol,
2:57
or posterior oblique ligament,
2:59
in which there is now a small area
3:01
of blood occupying its position.
3:03
Let's go over to the lateral side and take a look
3:07
at the lateral meniscus. Oh, it's fine.
3:10
But there is swelling of the meniscocapsular
3:12
reflection. Granted,
3:13
there's a little fracture here.
3:15
The hiatus, the popliteus hiatus is normal.
3:18
Upper fascicles normal. Fascicles still intact.
3:22
Popliteofibular ligament still intact. Okay,
3:25
our corners are all right.
3:27
We said we have a pivot shift.
3:29
We should have an acl tear.
3:31
Oh, we do.
3:33
Now,
3:34
some of you might hedge around the fact that you
3:38
have some fibers here, and you might say, well,
3:41
high grade or intermediate to high grade.
3:44
No, it's not intermediate to high grade.
3:48
It's a full thickness tear.
3:49
What are these fibers?
3:51
They're shredded fibers that are waving in the
3:55
breeze. They're attached to absolutely,
3:58
positively nothing.
4:01
It's a full thickness tear.
4:04
Let's look at the sagittal T2 weighted image.
4:10
There's no acl going back here.
4:13
These are
4:14
free fibers that have been completely detached.
4:18
This is bone. That's bone.
4:20
There is nothing here that attaches
4:23
this acl to that femur.
4:26
Now, that's not all.
4:28
We have an oblique sagittal T2 on the far right.
4:33
Let's have a look at it.
4:36
Got a few really interesting findings here.
4:39
One.
4:41
What is this?
4:44
Let's make it a little lighter.
4:47
I think many of you, including myself,
4:49
would say triangular shape. Must be a meniscus.
4:53
You'd be wrong. Me too.
4:57
Bucket handle tear, maybe. Displaced meniscus.
5:01
You'd be wrong. Me too.
5:03
Let's go back and follow it again.
5:05
It goes right back to the acl.
5:08
That is the Acl folded anteriorly on itself.
5:15
The ACl is doing this,
5:18
and it just happens in that projection,
5:21
in that cross section to make a triangular
5:24
appearance. Ooh, that's tricky.
5:27
This is the kind of ACl that restricts the
5:30
range of motion and can produce locking.
5:34
Sometimes we call this a pseudocyclops lesion.
5:38
You can get pseudocyclops lesions
5:41
from other structures, too,
5:43
from thickening of the ligamentum mucosum.
5:46
In fact,
5:47
there is some thickening of the
5:48
ligamentum mucosum right here,
5:50
and that also might contribute to decreased
5:54
range of motion in this patient.
5:55
The ligamentum mucosum,
5:57
not well developed in everybody,
5:59
is a fascia membrane that sits at the base of the
6:02
acl, and there is a portion of it, again seen,
6:05
it is often contiguous or continuous with the
6:10
infrapatellar plica. So there is the wavy,
6:14
injured ligamentum mucosum producing another
6:18
pseudocyclops like phenomenon
6:21
at the base of our torn ACl.
6:24
Now,
6:25
a couple of other take home points about looking
6:28
at acls. The sagittal is prince, princess, king,
6:34
queen.
6:35
But it's best suited for mid substance ruptures.
6:39
If you've got a tough case and you're trying
6:42
to tease out an area of the ACL,
6:44
my recommendation is pull down your
6:46
coronal and with your coronal,
6:49
use it for distal insertions in the tibial
6:53
spines and intertibial spinous notch.
6:57
Also try and follow the contour,
7:00
which should look like a water slide.
7:02
Should look a little bit like this.
7:04
Should be a very consistent waterslide from top
7:07
to bottom. And if your water slide is wavy,
7:10
this one is goes this way.
7:12
Then it's over here. Then it's over here.
7:15
They're not connected to each other.
7:17
Let's blow it up to prove it.
7:19
That is not connected to that.
7:21
The hip bone is not connected to
7:23
the knee bone in this case.
7:25
So our coronal projection helps us overall with
7:30
the ACL, but particularly valuable distally.
7:33
What about proximally? Axial.
7:36
Let's pull down a couple of axials.
7:39
Let's focus on this one right here in the center.
7:43
It's an axial simple T2 I use the axial when
7:49
I have isolated femoral wall avulsions.
7:53
So very high tears, proximal tears,
7:57
what I call origin tears.
7:59
So here we are distally near the tibial spines.
8:02
We follow the ACl up.
8:04
Now,
8:05
that's not what a proximal ACl would look like.
8:08
Approximal ACl should be a ligament.
8:11
It should be black. It should be linear.
8:13
It should have a shape like this.
8:15
Jet black.
8:17
That's not jet black. That's gray.
8:20
That's a ball.
8:22
There's nothing there.
8:24
So the femoral attachment of the ACL is off.
8:28
Axial for the proximal end for the origin,
8:33
coronal for the distal end for the attachment,
8:36
sagittal as the end. All to be,
8:39
all to assess most of the mid portion of the ACL.
8:45
Let's move on, shall we?
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.