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The Rules of the Lateral Meniscus

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Okay, our next meniscal focus

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is what I call the lateral meniscus rule.

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Now in order to illustrate what I mean by that,

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I have to go back to my rudimentary drawing skills.

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And I'm interested in discussing

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the anterolateral meniscus rule,

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which means there's a posterolateral meniscus rule.

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But that's not the subject today.

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It's the anterolateral rule.

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So, we've got a very busy party

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going on anteriorly.

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We have,

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as previously mentioned

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in some of our discussions,

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the transverse meniscal ligament of Winslow.

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Which, by the way,

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is not present in every individual, but in most,

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it is.

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The degree to which the transverse

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meniscal ligament extends along the anterior horn

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of the lateral meniscus varies,

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but it has a much more complex attachment.

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It has a slightly interdigitated attachment,

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along with tissue that is made of capsule

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and synovium.

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And in order to illustrate that,

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I have to make a much thinner line.

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And I'll do that right now.

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So, you're going to have quite

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a bit of interdigitation

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between the fascicles of the ligament

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and the capsule in the synovium,

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which I have drawn in green.

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So if you're looking at a normal meniscus,

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and let's do that.

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Redraw our meniscus in cross-section

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as if it's a sagittal view.

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So, this is our sagittal view.

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And it's a little thinner this time

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because I didn't have time to thicken up the line.

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Well, let me try it with a thin line.

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So, there's your anterolateral meniscus.

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And usually, the anterolateral meniscus is

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not straight up and down.

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It's sloped.

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Sometimes it's even sloped this much.

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I'll take out my eraser.

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Oops. Didn't want to do that.

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Here's my eraser.

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So, it'll often look a little bit like this.

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Then you have the transverse meniscal ligament

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of Winslow, which is going to sit right here.

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Should be in blue.

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Let's make it blue.

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And then, you're going to have

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areas of interdigitation

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which I will draw in green.

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I'll make them a little thicker now

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so that they're more easily seen.

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You have these little areas of interdigitation.

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Sometimes you have one dominant one,

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sometimes you have a lot of little ones.

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You will also have some interdigitation

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that comes down from the top,

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especially as you get close

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to the root attachment.

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So, if you have capsulosynovitis,

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or capsulitis,

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these green areas of interdigitation will become

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more conspicuous, a little thicker,

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and they'll swell.

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And if they're pretty deep,

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let's say this one was really deep.

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You could easily go down the drain

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and call it a cleavage tear.

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So, what's a mother to do?

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You've got interdigitation,

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you've got the transverse meniscal

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ligament of Winslow.

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And to make matters even worse,

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you also have the largest menisco synovial

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recess of the knee, the anterior recess,

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which comes out like this.

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So if you have an effusion.

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Very common for the effusion to hang right there.

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So now another structure has been

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lobbed into this inflamed knee.

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Maybe some chondromylation in the neighborhood.

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So here is an important lateral meniscus rule.

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If you are imaging in the sagittal projection.

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And you are unsure whether you have a tear or

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whether you're looking at inflamed areas

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of synovial attachment and ligamentous

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interdigitation.

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Almost never will the tear sit here at the root

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and not propagate to the body horn junction.

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So if after the second slice,

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that signal suddenly and abruptly goes away,

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it's either not a tear or it's not

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a tear worth dealing with.

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We're not talking about the root coming detached

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and the meniscus floating away and the meniscus

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twisting. Talk about it's in its normal position.

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And you see either one or more

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signals close to the midline.

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Rule number two,

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the lateral meniscus is a most favored nation.

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Meniscus for meniscal pseudocysts

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of meniscal origin.

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More common lateral than medial.

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More often painful lateral than medial.

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More often smaller lateral than medial.

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More often anterior lateral than medial.

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So this is a good spot to get a perimeniscal

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pseudocyst of meniscal origin.

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What's not good is the tail.

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The tail is going under the meniscus.

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That's a meniscus synovial recess.

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Or if it's under pressure and there's no fluid

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in the joint, could be a ganglion.

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Whereas a true meniscal pseudocyst

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of meniscal origin.

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Comes right out of the dead center of the

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meniscus. So it'll look something like this.

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It'll bisect it. I'll do it in pink.

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So a true meniscus pseudocyst comes right out.

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We'll overlay it right there.

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That is what a meniscal pseudocyst

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of meniscal origin should do.

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The tail should go right down the middle.

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Now should it come out the other side?

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It'd be nice if it did,

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but they don't all they can be true intraminiscal

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tears and just blow out the peripheral

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capsuler surface. How do you know?

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Well,

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because it goes in at least half

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the depth of the meniscus.

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It's a white line that communicates clearly with

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the thermometer bulb of the pseudocyst

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and it's right in the center.

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How did it get there?

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Usually there's an area of weakening so that there

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is diffusion along the radial bundles of the

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meniscus all the way out from the

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inner third to the outer third.

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Even though you might not see

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the inner third component.

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How do you deal with these ones

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that are intraminiscal?

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You may have to go from the outside,

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take it out and then sew the

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ones that communicate.

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You go from the inside and sew them shut and

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you leave the outside pseudocyst alone.

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And it usually dries up on its own

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unless it's inordinately large.

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But the take home message,

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the anterolateral rules are lots of

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interdigitation along the anterolateral

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deep horn and root,

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both ligamentous and synovial interdigitation.

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Unless it's on the third, 4th, 5th sagittal slice,

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it's not going to be a cleavage tear here.

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And fluid containing areas anterior to the lateral

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meniscus are not of meniscal origin unless they

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come right down the middle of the meniscus.

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Trauma

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Knee

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