Interactive Transcript
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I want to talk to you about a subject
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of biblical importance,
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and that is the prepatellar plate.
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Not too many people are excited about
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the prepatellar plate, but I am,
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which makes me a little bit nerdy.
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So, let's look at the patella
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in the sagittal projection.
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And then, let's take some tendon
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that's headed towards it.
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And that tendon is called a quadriceps tendon.
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Now, that tendon is actually composed
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of several layers of tissue.
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and that's why you're going to see within it some
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high signal intensity linear foci
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that look a little bit like this.
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Those are fat stripes and they occur because you
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have agglomerated or aggregated
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a group of structures that include
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the rectus femoris anteriorly,
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the vastus medialis and lateralis,
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in the middle,
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and the vastus intermedius is deep.
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So sometimes,
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that takes a little bit of fat with it
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as it fuses and comes towards the patella.
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Now, when it gets down to the patella,
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only the superficial layer comes down,
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which is the rectus layer,
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and this contributes to the pre patellar plate.
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Unfortunately,
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the prepatellar plate is a lot
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more complicated than that.
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A lot of you are familiar with the entity
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called prepatellar bursitis,
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but did you know that there are actually three
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different bursal layers in front of the patella
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in that little tiny space?
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That's crazy.
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Here's the skin,
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here's the prepatellar subcutaneous bursa.
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Here is the superficial transverse fascia layer.
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Then we've got another bursa,
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our middle bursa layer
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called the prepatellar subfascial bursa.
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Then we've got another layer
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of aponeurotic tissue,
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the intermediate oblique aponeurotic layer.
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And then we have another bursa,
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bursa number three,
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the prepatellar subaponeurotic bursa.
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And then, finally, we run into our longitudinal
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rectus fibers that are continuing over
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the top of the patella.
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So not one, not two,
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but three different bursa
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separated by aponeurotic layers.
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Now, structures may rub and tug against the patella
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and produce some bony proliferation.
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when it happens in the sagittal projection
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at the edges of the bone.
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Here's the patella,
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my weak attempt to drawing a sagittal patella,
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but when, let's say,
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the quadriceps is tugging on,
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it may make some spurs above,
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patellar tendon may make some spurs below.
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Let's pretend this is anterior here.
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Through continuous rubbing,
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sometimes the bone proliferates and makes
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these little wavy structures anteriorly.
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And this was described some time
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ago by the highly respected
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venerable and well known author,
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Ted Keats,
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who called this the tooth sign of the patella.
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And so the tooth sign on plane film,
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on plane radiography,
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described so beautifully in his variance book,
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is also visible on MRI,
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and it looks a little strange,
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so don't get put off by that.
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So now, let's look at our case.
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So, this 43-year-old man has knee swelling
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in the absence of injury.
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You're looking at a sagittal water-weighted image
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and a sagittal T1 weighted image,
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and you're struck by the high signal intensity
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anterior collection.
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And it has some blood products inside it,
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some high signal intensity,
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methemoglobin staining on the T1,
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fat-weighted image.
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So, immediately, you think trauma.
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But there's been no trauma,
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so that wouldn't really make a lot of sense.
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This is not an inconsequential thing you're seeing here.
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So, how can this happen?
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Well, by twisting,
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you know, perhaps it wasn't an injury.
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Perhaps it was a turn.
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You can shear off
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the fascia layers and produce what's known as
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fascial degloving, or Morel-Lavallée syndrome.
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Now, it's said thaat that's most common
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in the region of the hip and gluteal region,
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near the fascia lata.
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In our practice,
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we see more of them in the knee,
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but we do see quite a bit both
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in the hip and the knee.
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So, you can sit around and debate
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where it's more common.
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But the prepatellar space is a particularly common site,
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and you're probably wondering,
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well, which of those three bursa are involved?
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Well, that's pretty easy.
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You can pretty much count out the
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subcutaneous anterior bursa,
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because that one almost never distends.
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And if you look very carefully,
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and I blow this up for you,
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I'm going to do that right now.
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You can see there are actually two layers
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of fluid like signal here.
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This layer,
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which is a bit thicker,
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and the next layer behind it.
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Now, what's this linear structure?
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Another fascial layer.
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So, we have two layers that are distended.
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The prepatellar subfascial layer,
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not the subcutaneous layer,
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and the prepatellar subaponeurotic layer.
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And then this linear area right here
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is a little bit of stripping of the prepatellar plate.
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In other words,
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these are a few of the fibers separated
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from the rectus femoris tendon.
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So there's the rectus layer.
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There's a little bit of stripping
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of the rectus layer.
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There's the deep fascia layer that is degloved.
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There's the middle fascia layer that is degloved.
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And the subcutaneous fascia layer not seen,
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although there's superficial swelling.
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And the whole thing is associated
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with some hemorrhage.
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Let's look at it axially,
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because it goes over quite a bit to the side.
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And that can be a little bit confusing.
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Here's a little bit of separation of your rectus layer
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from your deeper rectus layer.
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So, you've got a little bit of rectus
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delamination of the plate.
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And then your deepest layer of bursa here,
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your middle layer here,
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and your superficial layer is not visible
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because it's not distended.
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This is Morel-Lavallée syndrome,
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or fascia degloving syndrome,
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with an injury to the prepatellar plate.
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