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Case Review: 12 Year Old Male with Problematic Graft

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Let's take a look at this adolescent

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male with open growth plates.

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So probably about 12 or 13 years of age,

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and this patient has had an anterior

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cruciate ligament graft.

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See if we can figure out where the graft came from.

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Perhaps we have to turn to the axial

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to see if there is a graft harvest site.

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And there is not.

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So most likely,

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this graft came from hamstring.

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You know,

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semimembranosus, semitendinosus,

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or one of the hamstring group.

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And in the axial projection,

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we're able to see the femoral tunnel

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and follow it into the knee notch.

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And now, we'll turn our attention

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to the sagittal projection.

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But I do use the axial and axial oblique

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to look inside the tunnels.

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Looking inside the tibial tunnel,

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you should probably be struck

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by the sheer size of the tunnel,

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relative to what's in it.

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There's an eensy teensy little object

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in the middle of a sea of higher signal.

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That is problematic.

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So, let's drill into it a little further.

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We've got, on the left,

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in the blue corner,

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the T1 weighted fat weighted image.

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In the middle,

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the overrated but sometimes useful T2 weighted image.

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And on the right, in the red corner,

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we've got the water weighted, fat-suppressed image

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or water-emphasized image.

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So let's start out with the red corner,

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the sensitive image.

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And I'm sure you all are struck by the edema

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in the tibia.

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You might say, well, okay,

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they drilled through the tibia.

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Why shouldn't there be any edema?

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That's true,

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but they also drilled through the femur.

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So, why isn't there edema in the femur if this

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is just physiologic from the surgery?

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So, that's not very logical.

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We have another issue to comment on,

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and we'll have to do that very diplomatically.

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They drilled through an open growth plate

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and they have

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what looks like a bioresorbable structure

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through the growth plate.

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So potentially, inciting premature closure.

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Although that probably isn't going

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to go into our report,

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but we'll have to diplomatically word this.

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How might we word it?

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We might say something like bioresorbable object

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or bioresorbable anchor,

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intratibial emplacement that crosses the tibial fisus.

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And then, we're going to go on to make some other

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descriptors that are coming very shortly.

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Now, let's look at where they put the femoral tunnel.

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We want that tunnel to be at the intersection

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between Blumensaat's line, which is right here,

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and the posterior femoral line.

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So if we follow across,

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right there is where our femoral tunnel

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should be going in, and it is.

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Very close to the cortex.

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Very brave, very proper,

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very appropriate.

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The tibial tunnel, it's a little posterior.

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I like them to be about 2 cm forward

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with the standard roof anatomy,

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this one's probably a little under 2 cm.

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So, it's placed a little bit backwards.

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But we have another problem.

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You can look at any of these sagittals you want.

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Let's scroll them and see if you can

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figure out the other problem.

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One quick scroll and you should have figured

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out by now that the tibia is going west.

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The tibia is going to your left passively,

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with the patient lying on their back.

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Tibia going to California,

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tibia going to Portugal,

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tibia going to Perth.

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It's going west the wrong way

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in somebody that should have a graph that keeps it

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more posterior.

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So, if you drop a line on either

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the medial or lateral side,

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in fact, I'll make my line with my color line.

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You should have no more than

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5 mm of space here or less.

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We've got almost 2 cm of space.

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Let's go over to the lateral side.

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Oh, it's forward too.

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We drop another line on the lateral side,

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ad we've got passive anterior tibial translation.

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No doubt.

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So, we've got automatically graft failure.

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Now, we have to define the failure.

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What happened?

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So let's look at all three images,

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the T1 first.

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Lots of swelling.

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And what might strike you is this.

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Follow very carefully.

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I'm going to make it a little bigger

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and a little tighter.

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Follow very carefully these fibers.

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Look where some of the fibers are going.

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They're sweeping over the top of the tunnel.

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They should be plunging into the tunnel,

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but they're not.

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They're going towards this object right here,

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which is obviously some surgical iatrogenic object

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because it has an artifact associated with it.

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So, something has pulled off and taken some

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of the ACL fibers with it, if not all.

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Let's look at the sagittal T2

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and really kind of tease out the case.

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Are there any fibers at all inside this tunnel?

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And the answer is yes, there are,

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right there.

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These straight darker fibers.

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Here they are right here on the water-weighted

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proton density fat sat image.

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And we saw these in the axial projection,

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our little dark object in a soup of high signal,

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but we've got too much high signal.

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Not only do we have too much high

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signal around these fibers,

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but we also have too much high signal in the tibia.

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So, what's going on?

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We've got inflammatory synovial tissue

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that has prolapsed into this tunnel

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and is auto digesting the tunnel.

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Look at the tunnel.

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It is massive compared to the size of

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the graft and the graft anchor.

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In fact, where is the graft?

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It's this little, tiny, squiggly thing here.

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So, we've got the phenomenon

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of tunnel osteolysis,

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which is often a byproduct of synovial tissue

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that is dissected into the tunnel,

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which, by the way, is more common

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when you resect the native anterior cruciate ligament.

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We do not have that same issue

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in the femoral region,

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and our diagnosis is further supported by this

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reactive, extensive edema throughout the tibia.

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Now, let's go back to that position

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of the fibers that we were talking about.

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The fibers look like they're going

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in the right direction here.

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They're plunging towards the hole

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that was made by the surgeon,

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but not these.

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These are making a detour.

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They're going to the left.

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The viewer's left.

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They're going towards the west coast,

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and they are attached to this susceptibility

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artifact right here,

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as we already pointed out on the T1 weighted image.

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So, something has pulled out.

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Perhaps some sutures have pulled out

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with the fibers of the ACL.

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There is failure of the tibial tunnel with osteolysis.

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There is overall graft failure.

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This graft cannot be saved with physical therapy.

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Unfortunately, at this very young age,

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this child is going to have to have a redo.

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Let's look at the coronal projection,

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because I think it really drives

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home the osteolysis phenomenon.

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We'll make them a little bigger.

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Look at your low signal anchor.

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Very few fibers are discerned within the tunnel.

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Here are a few right here.

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But look how big

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the tunnel is filled with synovium

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relative to the structures within it.

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And, of course,

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illustrated is the crossing of the growth plate,

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which we would like to avoid at all costs

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in most cases.

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How about the menisci?

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Well, it's a child.

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You don't get meniscal tears too often in a child.

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Doesn't have any.

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So, the menisci are just fine.

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The cartilage surfaces on the

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T1 weighted image coronally are just fine.

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And the case is really about graft failure.

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So, in a companion vignette,

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you saw a cyclops lesion with no passive translation.

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In this vignette,

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you've seen graft failure,

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no cyclops lesion,

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or maybe a little bit of synovial thickening

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right there.

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So maybe be a small cyclops lesion,

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but graft failure with passive anterior tibial

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translation and the phenomenon of tunnel lysis

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or perigraft synovitis in the tibial tunnel,

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auto digesting the bone and further

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contributing to graft failure.

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Let's look at another one, shall we?

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Trauma

Syndromes

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Knee

Iatrogenic

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