Interactive Transcript
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Okay.
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Welcome to our practical approach to one thing
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and one thing only today, menisci.
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So, I'm starting out with exactly what I said
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I wasn't going to do, a slide.
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You know, this is not meant to be didactic.
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It's meant to be an interactive experience so that
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you really understand how to talk about,
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not talk about menisci.
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But I have to have some,
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just basic framework of anatomy,
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and here it is.
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So I made this simple diagram,
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and on your left is kind of a broader half circle,
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and on your right is sort of a tighter
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C shaped circle.
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The one on the left happens to be
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the medial meniscus.
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Your left.
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The one on your right is the lateral meniscus.
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This part of the meniscus actually attaches down
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into the screen.
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That's called the root ligament.
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We can't see that, but this is the meniscus root.
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Here's the front root.
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There's the back root,
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And then, the rest of this is the anterior horn.
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And we'll keep it simple.
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The front third is the anterior horn.
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The middle third is the body.
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The posterior third is the posterior horn.
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Once again,
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these are the roots attached by ligaments.
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The menisci are also attached out peripherally
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by the capsule.
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Some tighter than others.
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In fact,
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the medial side has a tighter attachment
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than the lateral side.
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That's why it's more prone to
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certain types of meniscocapsular injury.
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And the same rules apply here.
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A third, a third, and a third
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for anterior horn body and posterior horn
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with attachment on the outside.
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Now, on the inside,
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the free edge of the meniscus is not attached.
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It's like the wing tips of a manta ray.
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It's just floating in synovial fluid.
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And sometimes,
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it'll get a little bunched up or squished.
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And when it does that,
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it looks a little funny,
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especially when there's synovium.
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That is the normal phenomenon and pitfall
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known as meniscal flounce.
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And we're going to see it.
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Now, the meniscus is also divided up into thirds,
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an inner third, a middle third,
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and an outer third.
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And in every meniscal tear,
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we want to comment on that,
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because the tears that occur here,
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you should almost never, ever operate on.
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They're all going to heal
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well enough on their own,
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better than they would do if somebody
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manipulated them or cut them out.
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The ones in the middle,
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kind of maybe yes,
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maybe no.
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But usually, not surgical candidates.
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The ones on the inner free edge,
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those are the ones that are more likely
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to require surgical intervention.
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And these areas are also known as the
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red white zone in the middle,
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the red red zone on the outside,
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and the white white zone on the inside,
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in orthopedic parlance.
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Now, this next slide,
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and this will be the last slide before we go into cases,
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demonstrates the meniscus in cross section.
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Now, you might have noticed in the last slide,
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there are some different colors in there,
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and I don't really care about those too much.
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But the bottom line is, within the meniscus,
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there is specialized anatomy that conducts
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synovium from the joint to the outside.
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So, there is a pathway of flow.
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I can draw it for you.
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See if it'll let me.
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There's a pathway of flow that goes this way.
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Notice it goes right along this
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purple and yellow anatomy.
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And that persistent flow along these bands of collagen
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that live inside the meniscus
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represents the normal intraminiscal signal,
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which you now see,
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is not present in the inner third,
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as depicted by this purplish area,
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starts around the middle third,
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depicted by the yellow,
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and then kind of breaks off into two bundles,
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one here and one there.
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Kind of makes like a little fork
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or a couple of bunny ears,
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if you turn it straight upside,
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right side up.
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And those bunny ears are normal,
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they should be relatively faint.
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They should never be equal to or
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brighter than hyaline cartilage.
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They should never go all the way back to the capsule.
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They should never go up and down.
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They should never have complex character.
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They should have exactly what I've drawn here,
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this gently sloping character.
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Now,
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a lot of your colleagues will refer to these signals
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in different ways.
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You'll hear them called contusions.
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You'll hear them called degeneration.
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You'll hear them called myxoid change.
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You'll hear them called cysts.
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And each one of these has an appropriate
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setting where it's to be used.
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But let's give an example.
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You're fresh out of training,
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and you call the signal in the
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meniscus in a 32-year-old,
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otherwise healthy girl that just ran 3 miles,
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meniscal degeneration.
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But the rest of her knee looks fine.
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Why in the world would you use the term degeneration?
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She has no DJD.
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Her meniscus is of normal size.
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She just ran 3 miles.
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It is a silly term to use in that setting.
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Or if I hear degeneration in the 13 year old,
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what 13 year old has a degenerated meniscus?
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Nobody,
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except maybe somebody with a discoid meniscus.
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This is silly stuff.
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This is like saying,
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"Let's give all the banks any of the rules they want."
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That's silly stuff.
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Let's stop doing silly stuff.
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And your job, your primary job,
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is to save the whales.
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Save the menisci.
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The slightest amount of trimming in the meniscus,
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change the knee dynamics forever
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for that person's entire life.
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It is a total game changer.
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So, the worst thing you can do is call
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something that is not there.
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