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Case Review: 28 Year Old Injured in a Fall

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This is a 28-year-old with a fall.

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He described a twisting element to his fall,

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but in front of the tibia is an area of swelling,

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the typical pretibial abrasion, site of impaction,

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where his knee struck the ground,

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probably with an element of flexion.

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So he probably fell like this,

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and struck the front of the tibia

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as he went down.

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This drives the tibia posteriorly.

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And actually,

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if you look at this image and the one next to it,

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the back of the tibia looks like it's way far

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posterior compared to the posterior femoral line.

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This is, in fact,

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a clinical sign called the sag sign

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of a PCL injury or PCL deficiency.

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We take our model and we lay a patient down

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with severe PCL deficiency,

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the tibial will actually passively sag back.

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And you can push it back inordinately.

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So, you can get the tibial sag sign on MR.

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You can also get it clinically.

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We've got a T1 fat weighted image on the left,

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a water weighted image in the middle,

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and a T2 weighted image on the far right,

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also allegedly water weighted.

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This is the most sensitive sequence.

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So, here is our detection sequence.

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On the left,

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we use the T1 weighted image for morphology

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and especially to trace the hypointense cortex at

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the tibial locus of insertion on the tibia,

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which lies, by the way, below the tibial plateau.

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So, you can't see this area when the ACL is intact,

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arthroscopically.

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It's invisible to the surgeon,

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and this is an MR diagnosis.

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Now, one question that you always have to answer

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when you see signal in the PCL is,

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are you volume averaging,

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because the PCL is surrounded by a sheath

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that is common to the PCL and the ACL.

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So you could injure the ACL, swell the sheath,

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and volume average that swollen

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sheath with the PCL,

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or are you actually seeing an abnormality

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in the ligament itself?

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There are two bundles to the PCL,

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but they tend to be more twisted.

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So, interstitial but functional full thickness tears

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of the PCL are common.

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Interstitial but functional full thickness tears

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of the ACL, much less common.

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Distraction and separation of ACL tears, common.

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Distraction and separation of PCL tears, uncommon.

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Now, you could get distraction

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and separation of a fracture,

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which would change the therapy completely.

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So, if you avulse a piece of cortex

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or a piece of bone and it's distracted,

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that changes the therapy dramatically.

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And the tip off there is a hemarthrosis

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and losing this cortical outline.

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So, what's the T2 weighted image for?

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Because the T2 weighted image certainly dulls

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the signal intensity within the ligament.

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Does that mean it's not a tear?

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Absolutely not.

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Because what's the signal of

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acute blood on a T2?

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Dark.

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What's the signal of hemosiderin?

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Dark.

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What's the signal of fibrous tissue?

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Dark.

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What's the signal of a normal tendon or ligament?

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Dark.

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So, there are many ways and many tissue types

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that you can get fooled on

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on a T2 weighted image

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where you actually can miss tears,

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both acutely with acute blood on a T2

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and chronically with hemosiderin scar

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and fibrous tissue on a T2.

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So, do not rely on the T2

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to exclude a PCL tear.

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What should you rely on?

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You should look at the

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posterior cruciate ligament perpendicularly.

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Now, ideally,

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I'd like to go in this direction,

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but most of us have orthogonal images.

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So, go to your orthogonal images

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and inspect the PCL.

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You can see we've got two bundles,

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a medial bundle and a lateral bundle.

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Let's follow them.

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I want to see a well defined,

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high etched signal intensity inside my PCL.

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And you bet, I've got it.

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Right there.

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I'm going to blow it up for you.

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There's my PCL.

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There's all that signal inside the PCL.

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It's like intel inside.

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It's inside, not around,

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although there is swelling around the PCL,

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and we continue to follow it forward,

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and eventually, it disappears.

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So, how would I describe this abnormality?

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As a high grade, functional,

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full thickness interstitial PCL tear

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without evidence of fracture

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and with posterior tibial translation

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consistent with PCL deficiency.

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One last caveat.

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I've got a T2 axial.

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Why not show it?

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Look at how deficient the T2 weighted image is

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in really highlighting the PCL tear.

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Let's put it up against

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our coronal fat suppression image.

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Look inside the PCL.

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Easy.

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Look inside the PCL,

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it's gray, it's dull, it's amorphous,

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it's ill defined.

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Yes, it's abnormal.

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You'd like to see a nice black ball,

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a nice black pendant, and you don't.

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But it's not as easy for the novice

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or beginner to see

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as this water weighted fat suppressed image.

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So again, I caution you,

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don't rely on the T2 weighted image

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to exclude cruciate ligament tears.

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Trauma

Syndromes

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Knee

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