Interactive Transcript
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Okay, this is a youngish man,
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but not a child, not a juvenile.
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It's a man.
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And let's just take a quick look
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at the axial for a moment.
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Those of you that do quite a bit of MRI may
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notice there's an extra structure in here.
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Not this one.
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That's the posterior cruciate ligament.
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This one. What is that thing?
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Well,
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it happens to be the anterior cruciate ligament.
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That is fat and bloody and laying down anterior
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early. That's not why we're here.
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We're here to look at the sequela once again of
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a pivot shift and what it does to meniscus.
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You can see a little bit of fluid
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in the capsule and posteriorly,
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on the medial side is the structure known as the
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posterior oblique ligament of the knee
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or posterior ligament of the knee,
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which we're going to talk about at a later date.
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But I did want you to see it.
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Here it is again,
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seen right at the level of the meniscus.
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Let's go to the sagittal projection,
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and we have already established there's
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a major pivot shift with an ACL tear.
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There's the typical pivot shift bone injury.
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There is the typical pivot shift bone injury of
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the tibia as well as the femur that you just saw.
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And you've got
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the same bone injury in the posteromedial tibia.
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So let's start on the medial side.
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We said that the tibia will translate anterior
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or the femur will translate posterior,
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and then slam down on the back
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of the stretched capsule.
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And that's exactly what has happened here.
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We've got bleeding in the capsule.
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Then I know how many of remember we talked about
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the sliver tear? The sliver tear is that thin,
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tiny little vertical tear that sits right adjacent
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to the capsule. And there it is.
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And once again, that signal will persist.
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It'll become much less swollen, much less hot,
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much less hyper intense over time,
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but it'll persist for many years, if not forever.
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So we don't want to call this a
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meniscocapsular separation,
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but it is a meniscocapsular junction sprain or
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injury or bleed. And there's also a peripheral,
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one third red zone medial meniscus tear.
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Let's continue on over to the lateral side.
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There's quite a bit of space here to
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house all this blood, by the way.
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So let's scroll laterally now.
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And as we're on our way over to the lateral side,
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you may have noticed this big,
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large structure that looks like a thumb.
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It is the anterior cruciate ligament.
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Filled with blood bent forward.
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We are here at the lateral meniscus root.
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And the posterior attachments of the lateral
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meniscus. The superior and inferior fascicles.
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Are a little bit stubby and fat.
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It should be a millimeter in thickness.
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So they're too thick. But also the capsule,
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which should tether this attachment right here.
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That is an attachment for these two structures.
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That should be tethered to that.
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See where the tether is broken.
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So there has been a posterior capsuler disruption.
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And that has allowed these attachments.
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To squiggle up a little bit.
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They also are torn.
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If you keep scrolling right there,
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there's no attachment between the popliteus,
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the capsule, and the meniscus.
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There should be a perforating linear structure.
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Coming back from this triangle inferiorly.
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And from this triangle superiorly.
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So the posterolateral meniscocapsular
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and popliteal attachments have torn.
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Let's look at the popliteus tendon.
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Because when that happens,
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there is frequently an injury to the
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popliteofibular ligament Either
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in the form of a rupture.
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With a squiggly little tail rolled up in a ball.
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Or a wavy tail from a stretch.
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And we have the wavy tail known as the mermaid
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sign. There's the body of the mermaid.
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And there's the wavy tail of the mermaid.
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Which should be a straight shot right down
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as a black line from here to here.
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We don't have that. We have a gray,
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somewhat waddling, wavy signal.
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From the popliteus tendon.
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As the popliteofibular ligament.
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This little stubby structure right here.
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Is what remains of the paplateo tibial ligament.
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Let's look at the meniscus all the way
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near the root. Here's the root.
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And some of you may be struck by
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this structure right here.
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Which is a swollen
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but present ligament of Wrisberg.
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That is not a fragment of the meniscus.
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That's the Wrisberg ligament.
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Leaving the postero superior inner free edge.
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Of the lateral meniscus.
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And coursing supromeedial as
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a ligamentous structure.
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So don't get confused by that potential pitfall.
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And you can see it reattaches right back
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into the triangle. So in this case,
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we have injured the posteromedial meniscal
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capsuler attachment. With a vertical sliver tear.
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On the medial side, there's our sliver tear.
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And on the lateral side,
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we have disruption of the meniscopopliteal
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and capsuler fascicles posteriorly,
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along with an injury of the popliteofibular
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ligament and a frank tear of
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the posterior capsule.
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Just take a look at the coronal for a moment,
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because this is such a nasty injury.
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Just out of curiosity,
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the collaterals are not too bad looking.
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There's the tibial collateral ligament,
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and here is the fibular collateral ligament.
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So there hasn't been a major Varus or valgus force
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or a major twist associated with this injury.
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Okay, let's do another one, shall we?
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