Interactive Transcript
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All right.
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This case is another meniscally focused case.
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It's an adult man with a work related injury.
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Lord knows what he was doing.
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But often underutilized is the axial projection.
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And when you scroll thin section axials,
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less than 2 mm,
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you can pick up a lot of information.
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For instance,
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you can see a problem with the
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bone on the lateral side,
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which correlates with this fracture or
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osteochondral fracture on the lateral side,
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you also see distension of the posterolateral
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meniscocapsular reflection by fluid.
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So that already tells you that you probably have
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had some type of pivot shift related insult.
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And then when you go over to the medial
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meniscus side, to the root,
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the area of the root attachment,
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which is right here,
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is interrupted vertically from anterior
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to posterior by this high signal area,
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which represents a radial injury
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and a fairly large radial injury at that.
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So, you can get a depth of that radial injury.
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You can get a width which is a little more
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narrow here, but widens as it goes in.
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And now, it's time to look at the meniscus
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and another projection,
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even though there's lots more information about
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what's happening with the ligaments
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and the axial projection.
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But that's a story for another day.
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So now,
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let's look at the coronal since it's up
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and we have extensive bone marrow edema,
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which tells us posteriorly in the tibia
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that we've had a pivot shift.
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We also have the typical terminal sulcus injury,
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again, supporting the mechanism
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of injury of a pivot shift,
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which we will go over that mechanism
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when we focus on ligaments.
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But you should be dialed into the small
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character of the medial meniscus.
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It's got a little vertical signal in it,
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which is part of our tear.
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Let's follow our tear around.
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We can follow it into the posterior
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horn body junction region.
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So, there is a vertical component.
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There's a horizontal or oblique component.
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So there's some complexity to this tear,
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but I'm primarily showing it for this.
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The radial gap that you saw in the axial projection.
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Let's go back to it.
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Here it is right here,
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oft-overlooked but never understated.
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And it's got some width to it.
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Obviously,
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that width changes from anterior to posterior,
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so it'll change as you scroll
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from front to back.
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And it is just medial to the root attachment.
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There is the root ligament attachment
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arcing down next to a small bundle of the PCL
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that courses along the inner wall
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of the femoral condyle.
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It's intact,
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but it is the meniscus immediately adjacent
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to the meniscotibial attachment that is torn.
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So, functionally,
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you've lost your tether there,
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and that's going to allow, over time,
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with hoop stresses,
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the meniscus to start to migrate out.
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It has not done so yet.
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Let's look at the sagittal projection.
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We'll reaffirm our anterior cruciate ligament tear,
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although that's not why we're here.
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There is our fairly large tear,
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and here is our meniscus tear,
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which we said was rather complex.
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It had an oblique or horizontal component,
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and then it continues on with a little,
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tiny vertical component,
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which is so common in these pivot shifts.
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This signal will be there forever.
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It is going to sit directly atop
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the meniscal contusion.
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So, you don't want to get too excited about these
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when you see them a year or two later.
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But I also wanted to show you
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the meniscal ghost.
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Here we are,
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right through our radial tear.
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The meniscus is there.
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It's gone, it's back again.
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So you're missing that chopped segment right there.
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And meniscal ghosting,
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or loss of meniscal signal,
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can be seen with congenital absence
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of the meniscus,
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which is much more common laterally.
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Although, still a rare phenomenon.
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You can see it with auto digestion
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from rheumatoid arthritis.
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Get a big bucket handle tear that separates
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the meniscus into two pieces,
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you will lose the meniscus, a giant radial tear,
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you'll lose the meniscus.
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And even infiltrative processes like CPPD
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and gout may completely wipe out and
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obliterate the meniscus.
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So, let's move on to another meniscal case.
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