Interactive Transcript
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This is a 49-year-old female with knee pain.
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Sensation of catching,
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and she has had prior arthroscopy.
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Let's begin with a series of sagittal images.
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On the far left is the proton density fat
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suppression, the water sensitive sequence,
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the T2 in the middle,
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and the fat weighted morphologic sequence
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on the right. Let's scroll.
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If so,
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she did not have a specific episode of trauma.
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I will give you the penetrating trochlear groove
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erosion and the one in the patella.
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They probably clang against each
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other with a knee inflection.
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But the purpose of showing you these three
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sagittals is to demonstrate the abhorrent
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appearance of the anterior cruciate ligament.
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It is lying down. The axis is abnormal.
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It is headed towards the posterior cruciate
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ligament, which is right there.
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And you can't really see any normal
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tissue on the T1. weighted image.
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So what tissue we're seeing
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here is severely diseased.
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The proximal tissue is basically pulverized.
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There's no proximal acl.
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So this is an acl tear in the absence of a known
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traumatic event. So how did this happen,
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by the way?
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Some of you may be focusing on this small little
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cystic area here. That's an intraoceus ganglion.
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It's a distractor. Ignore it.
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What's it from? Friction.
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What's the friction from? Dysplasia.
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What's the dysplasia?
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Well,
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let's take a look in the sagittal projection.
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Let's draw a line along Blumenstadt's
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line right there.
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And then let's take a line right down the
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barrel of the center of the tibia.
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So the tibial axis.
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And we're assuming the knee is pretty straight,
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if we look at this angle,
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this angle should be about 138 degrees.
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As this angle closes,
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more stresses are placed upon the native anterior
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cruciate ligament. So in other words,
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as Blumenstadt's line becomes more horizontal,
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the stresses in the knee notch become greater.
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There are other stressors on the anterior
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cruciate ligament. In the knee notch,
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sometimes you have dysplastic bony ridges.
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This patient has one, actually.
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Sometimes you'll have spurs that encroach on the
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acl, secondary notch dysplasia or notch stenosis.
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And then you can look at the axial.
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Let's do that. Let me close my window,
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my drawing window for a minute here.
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Let's take a look at the axial.
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And as we come up a little bit,
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look at this ridge right here that's pressing
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against the front of the notch,
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and then look at the notch.
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It's kind of narrow, then broad,
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then narrow again in the back.
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And we're going to have a separate
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vignette to look at measurements,
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which I often don't do because they take a lot
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of time, and I find them of limited utility.
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But we'll show you some ways to measure the
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anteroposte dimension and the transverse dimension
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and some ratios of these dimensions relative
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to the condyles. At a separate sitting,
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let's take a look at the notch in the coronal
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projection for a moment in this patient with an
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utterly pulverized torn anterior. Christian,
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let's bring down a gradient echo in
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the middle and a T1 on the right.
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Look at how the notch has a very wide patulus,
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globular appearance. Up high, it's rather tall,
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and then as it comes down,
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there's a pretty sharp taper.
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So that in itself is a form of dysplasia.
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Has a very weird shape to it.
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It's almost like a perfect oval, if you will.
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And in the coronal projection,
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you again identify the squiggly, wiggly, diseased,
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pulverized fibers of the anterior crucial
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ligament on the gradient echo image.
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Now, I could say pay no attention to the meniscus,
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but that would probably be a little too dismissive
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since there is a giant, complex,
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chronic cleavage tear of the medial meniscus,
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generating a massive perimeniscal pseudocyst of
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meniscal origin. These tend to be bigger.
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They tend to go more posterior.
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They tend to be more painless on the medial
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side than the lateral side.
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Lateral side,
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they like to be a little more anterior.
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They're smaller, they're more painful.
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No, that is not a perimenoiscal lateral cyst,
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as some of you might have thought.
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Those are vessels.
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So a little pitfall or trick there.
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Let's look at our meniscus and our acl
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on the T1 There's our missing acl.
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There's a fiber of it right there.
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And here is our large medial meniscus tear with
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our proteinaceous perimeniscal pseudocyst,
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a meniscal origin.
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Why is it a pseudocyst not lined by epithelium,
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not lined by synovium?
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It is lined by fibrous tissue.
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Diagnosis,
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dysplasia of the knee notch resulting in
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spontaneous rupture of the acl due to
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repetitive friction and microtrauma.
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With a myriad of other findings,
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including a large medial meniscus tear and a
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perimeniscal pseudosystem. Meniscal origin.
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Let's look at another one, shall we?
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