Interactive Transcript
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So on your left, the sagittal water sensitive PD spur.
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T1 fat-weighted anatomy image in the middle,
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and the T2 spin echo on the right.
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I have intentionally provided a scan with
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a little bit of quadriceps inflammation,
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showing exaggerated striations.
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Now these exaggerated striations are related
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to fluid between the interstitial fibrils or the
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insertional fibrils of the subgroups
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that make up the quadriceps.
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So it's a multi-layered structure.
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And what's it made up of?
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The rectus femoris in the front,
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the vastus medialis and lateralis in the mid lateral
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and mid medial portions of the quad.
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And then the VIO,
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the vastus intermedius is the deepest layer.
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So you can separate the layers,
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you can perpendicularly tear a superficial
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layer, like the rectus.
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You can go halfway through or 3/4 full and get 2 or 3 layers,
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or you could get the whole thing in which case it retracts,
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you can tear it and separate it here.
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You can take a piece of bone with it,
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and the striated appearance is very apparent
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down low as you approach the patella.
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Now, the continuation of the quadriceps across the
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patella is seen, perhaps better, as the union of
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the pre-patellar plate and the cortex in front.
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You've already learned that there are three separate bursa layers
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here that can lead to fascial degloving
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or Morel-Lavallée syndrome.
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Patient has a small traction spur anteriorly.
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Now, what is continuing over the patella ee articulated earlier
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is just the rectus layer or the most superficial layer.
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The deeper layers, namely the VMO, the VLO,
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and the VIO drop out.
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Then this continues on as the patellar tendon,
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which has a slight slope from anterosuperior
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to posteroinferior. Therefore, it's prone to magic angle effect
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or in other words, higher signal on short TE sequences
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that go away on the T2-weighted image
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or if the patellar tendon is a little wavy at each site
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where there's a little wave,
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the tendon may appear a little bit gray.
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Then it inserts on the tibial tubercle.
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Above, we see the reflected fat pad,
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which is a site of potential impingement.
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We have an infrapatellar fat pad,
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which is another site of potential impingement.
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We'll teach you a little bit later on how to use the PD spur,
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the T1 and the T2 to recognize
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and to properly named abnormalities
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of all tendons.
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But especially the quadriceps tendon.
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Let me turn my attention with you now to the axial projection.
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I'm up above the patella, right near the insertion
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and now we see vertical striations.
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And this is common
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and the interdigitation between the rectus femoris,
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the VIO,
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the VMO and the VLO, is not so apparent
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as it is in the sagittal projection.
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But you could tear on one side or the other side,
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you could tear partial thickness,
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or full thickness,
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you can tear vertically and separate the tendinous
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way or you could tear horizontally, a so-called
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delamination tear that separates
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the individual muscle bundles.
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The depth of the tear is measured this way.
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The length of a tear of the quadriceps is
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measured this way from side to side.
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So you could,
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you could tear all the way through on this side,
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you would have a full thickness, yet incomplete tear.
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You could have a delamination tear in
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the superficial layer and the mid layer or
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in the deep layer running side to side.
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Now, a little bit more anatomy.
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On the lateral side is the vastus lateralis and the VLO tendon.
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We also have the continuation of the quadriceps as the
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quadriceps retinaculum, which contributes
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to layer 2 of the anterior LCL.
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Let's look at the coronal projection now.
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We're very far anterior and we see the quadriceps
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tendon layering out. In other words,
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fanning out from side to side.
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We see a continuation of it as the lateral quadriceps retinaculum
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merging with the parapatellar retinaculum.
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And although not seen in this projection,
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the vastus lateralis oblique is tendon.
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There you see it again on a more posterior slice.
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The retinaculum and continuation of the quadriceps tendon,
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forming part of the parapatellar retinaculum.
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Remember that the quad contributes to layer two
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of the lateral collateral ligament complex.
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