Interactive Transcript
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This is a 28-year-old male football player
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who felt a pop while making a cut.
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He's got pain and marked swelling.
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The axial projection, seen here at low field,
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which does just fine in the knee.
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And the contrast resolution at low field is
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probably better than it is at high field.
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The spatial resolution at high field
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is better than it is at low field.
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We've got great contrast resolution here.
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And we see a blood fluid level,
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which means is we probably got fractures.
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Can we find them? We sure can.
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There's one in the back right there.
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That is not a normal appearance of the
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posterolateral tibia. That is.
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Might we have other fractures?
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We might. There might be one in the femur.
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We'll corroborate that in another projection,
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and you could ignore for now,
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this area of chondromalacia,
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in the medial patellar facet.
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Let's pull down our sagittal T1 and
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put it astride our coronal.
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So on either sides of our fat suppressed,
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water weighted coronal are a T1 and a water
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weighted, fat suppressed sagittal. All right,
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let's scroll these together.
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And we have established a depressed,
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broad osteochondral fracture of the femoral
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terminal sulcus of the lateral femur.
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That means we've had a pivot shift injury.
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And now it's time to look for
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the non kissing injuries.
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Fractures or contusions that are going to be seen
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as the femur is driven backwards onto the
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tibia or the tibia moves forward.
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So this will come in contact with this during
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the pivot shift event, and indeed, it has.
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Resulting in a fracture.
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A fracture with a fracture fragment seen on T1
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and the fracture corroborated in the coronal
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projection. So what does this tell us?
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It tells us that the injury has been pretty
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violent. There's a much smaller bone injury.
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Postromedially,
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there's a posteromedial capsuler corner injury
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with swelling of the capsuler interface.
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That'll be a story for another vignette,
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but let's go back over to the lateral side,
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and we'll pass by the pcl,
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or posterior cruciate ligament. It's intact.
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We'll pass by the ACL.
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It is not intact.
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It is just a bag of blood and floating fibers.
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Where's the cut? Right there.
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So not unexpected with this family of
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bone injuries. The ACl is gone.
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Let's go to the lateral corner.
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And in the lateral corner,
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we are concerned with the fibular collateral
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ligament, which is part of the LCl complex.
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We've already established that that's intact.
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So now we're interested in the popliteus tendon.
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We can establish in the coronal projection.
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The papillatius tendon is intact.
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And in the corner we are especially interested
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in the pop fib ligament.
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So here is the popliteus tendon.
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And that is the blunted,
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non attached pop fib ligament.
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So that should be attached to the tip of
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the fibula. Just medial to the arcuate.
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Let's look at the arcuate area.
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Which is right behind the papaltius tendon.
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It's this area right here.
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This is all arcuate. This is capsule.
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This is the oblique papillate ligament
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and capsule, which, by the way,
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are injured and a little swollen.
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But right in front of it is the arcuate space.
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There should be linear fibers running up and down.
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And they're not.
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They're gone.
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Let's look coronally and see if we can
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identify the arcuate. And we can.
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It comes right off the tip of the fibula.
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And there it is. And there it stops right there.
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So as the arcuate comes up, it splits.
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It'll come up off the tip of
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the fibula right there.
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And then it'll have a vertical limb in the
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back and an oblique limb in the back.
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Neither of which we see because the
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arcuate is blunted right there.
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So we can firmly establish that the pop fib
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ligament is torn. The arcuate is torn.
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Let's check out the lateral meniscus and its
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attachments. It has an upper attachment.
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And then there should be a lower attachment
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to the popliteus tendon.
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And that is blunted. There's too much space here.
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It almost looks like it's floating there.
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It's clearly blunted. More pointed.
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Blunted. Pointed. Blunted.
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So the inver attachment of the lateral meniscus.
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And the meniscocapsular junction is injured.
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So we've got some major structures in the
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posterolateral corner that are dinged.
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We have torn the pop fib ligament.
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We have torn the arcuate.
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We have partially torn the meniscocapsular
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attachment.
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Now, in my conclusion,
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that would all go in there along with the ACL
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transection and the mechanism of injury.
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Namely pivot shift.
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Mechanism of injury with ACL transsection,
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hemarthrosis and posterolateral corner injury.
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That includes a, b and c.
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Now I would put into the body of the report
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the posteromedial corner injury.
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Because that's of lower grade character.
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And then I would describe in the conclusion
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the status of the meniscae.
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And they are pretty well preserved in this case,
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except for the posteromedial meniscocapsular
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junction where there is a sprain.
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And I would add that into my conclusion and say
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the meniscai are otherwise unremarkable.
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Nasty posterolateral corner injury at low field.
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