Interactive Transcript
0:00
49-year-old male with
0:02
"osteoarthritis and knee pain."
0:05
Let's take a look at how
0:07
the T2 weighted image can hurt you.
0:11
Let's begin in the center
0:14
with a proton density fat suppression.
0:17
Now, a mistake was made here.
0:19
If you look in the upper left hand corner at the TE,
0:21
the TE is 15.
0:22
That is too short a TE for a proton density
0:26
fat suppression, spurse bearer special.
0:29
The TE should hover around 30 to 50.
0:32
That's going to give you your maximum intensity
0:36
for water signal intensity.
0:38
So you're actually,
0:40
in some ways,
0:41
dulling the contrast resolution
0:43
by making the TE too short.
0:46
Okay, let's set that aside.
0:48
That being said,
0:50
what is all this dark stuff in the joint?
0:52
I mean, it's everywhere.
0:54
Let's scroll it.
0:58
And some of it is tumefactive.
1:01
In other words, it exhibits mass effect.
1:04
And unlike, say, synovial chondromatosis,
1:07
where the abnormalities,
1:09
kind of round and repetitive,
1:11
they all have about the same size.
1:13
It's almost like pebbles or stones.
1:16
This is more mass like,
1:18
more ill-defined,
1:20
more random shapes, bulkier.
1:22
And it happens to be diffused
1:24
in multiple compartments.
1:26
This is what pigmented
1:28
villonodular synovitis looks like.
1:30
And the knee is the most common joint to have it.
1:34
Now, when it gets really big in joints
1:37
with smaller capsules,
1:39
like the hip, the elbow, the ankle,
1:43
the ones with the three smallest capsules,
1:45
you're going to see pressure erosions.
1:47
The knee happens to have a nice floppy capsule,
1:50
so not too many pressure erosions.
1:52
But after all that being said,
1:55
that's not why I'm showing the case.
1:57
It just happens to be a crazy good case.
2:00
Look at the T1 weighted image,
2:03
the siderotic character of the abnormality,
2:06
not really easy to appreciate.
2:08
What might you look for?
2:09
A little bit of methemoglobin staining,
2:12
a lot of mass effect.
2:14
The bulk of the PVNS is so great
2:17
that even on the T1,
2:19
some dark signal is present and abides.
2:23
So even on the T1,
2:25
if you just got showed this,
2:26
you would be suspicious of the diagnosis.
2:30
Now we flop over to the T2
2:33
and, wow,
2:34
everything is just black.
2:37
All the structures,
2:38
all the internal structures are buried in a
2:42
morass of villonodular siderotic tissue.
2:48
So, what's a mother to do?
2:51
Well, you could go to a T2 fast spin echo,
2:56
and this has less of a susceptibility distortion effect
3:01
with metal and iron and siderosis,
3:04
but unfortunately, we don't have one.
3:06
So, what's the next best choice?
3:08
T1.
3:09
Let's go over to the T1 and check out some
3:11
of our internal structures.
3:13
We've got a posterior cruciate ligament,
3:16
and we have an anterior cruciate ligament,
3:18
except that the anterior cruciate ligament
3:21
is not coursing in the right direction.
3:23
It should be going a little bit higher
3:25
following blumensaat line.
3:27
It should insert over here.
3:28
It's going more towards, say,
3:30
North Carolina than Maine,
3:33
more towards Brisbane than Cairns.
3:35
In other words, it's not headed northeast enough.
3:40
The axis is off,
3:42
and we don't see it connect to bone.
3:45
There's a gap. We never,
3:46
ever see it connect to bone.
3:49
What does it connect to?
3:50
The PCL.
3:51
Now, if you tried to make that diagnosis
3:54
on the T2
3:55
with all the siderosis and the dark ligament,
3:59
it's impossible.
4:01
Your confidence level would be extremely low.
4:04
How about on the PD?
4:05
Maybe on the PD.
4:07
You know,
4:08
because there's some siderotic material
4:10
that's stringing along the ACL.
4:12
And you can appreciate that the axis is too low.
4:16
It's too mid.
4:18
Should be higher,
4:19
coming right up to this point.
4:21
So this is an example where the T2,
4:24
while assisting you with the diagnosis of PVNS,
4:28
is not your friend in this scarred siderotic ACL tear.
4:35
Just for giggles,
4:36
let's put up some coronals
4:37
and see what else we have,
4:39
because that's the essence of the case.
4:43
Let's look at these two coronals right here
4:45
in the middle and the right,
4:47
PD spur.
4:48
This time,
4:49
they did choose the correct TE,
4:52
TE 50.
4:53
So that gives you some heavy water weighting,
4:55
showing you an effusion and some chondromalacia
4:58
a large pseudocyst,
4:59
or penetrating erosion at the base of the PCL,
5:03
really not adding a lot to the character
5:06
and the diagnosis of the case.
5:08
The meniscus on the lateral side is pseudo-extruded.
5:12
It's hypofunctioning.
5:13
It's not really adding to the patient's support
5:16
because the patient's lying on their back.
5:18
So, it isn't really supporting
5:19
the femur and the tibia.
5:20
It also has a tear in it.
5:22
That's not really extremely relevant to the case.
5:25
And then,
5:25
let's just look at the bulk of the
5:27
PVNS on the axial T2 weighted image,
5:30
and it is tremendous.
5:32
So the take-home message,
5:34
and by the way, there's a bursal cyst in the back.
5:37
The take home message is,
5:39
when you have chronicity, siderotic change,
5:42
fibrotic change, scarring in an ACL,
5:46
or any ligamentous injury in the body,
5:49
you cannot rely on the T2 spin echo
5:53
or fast spin echo for a diagnosis.
5:55
Let's move on, shall we?
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.