Interactive Transcript
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Here's a 66-year-old woman
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with an awfully strange presentation
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of a PCL problem.
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Now, we've got both of her knees,
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which is fantastic.
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We've got her right knee and her left knee.
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And let's scroll the PCl on her right knee.
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As is often the case in adults,
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the PCL has a slightly hazy,
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smoky look to it because the sheath is often a
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little bit swollen, and it's pretty thick.
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The ACL and PCL share a common sheath,
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so I'm not at all disturbed by this sort of ill
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defined, heterogeneous signal in the PCL.
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Now,
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another character of the PCl which differs from
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the ACL is that the ACl tends to have
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a more parallel set of fibers,
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anteromedial and posterolateral bundles.
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So you have the AM and the Pl.
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The Am is about 70% of the restraint.
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The PL is about 30%.
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But in the PCL, we have the exact opposite.
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We've got an anterolateral and a posteromedial.
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And unlike the ACL,
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instead of them being parallel,
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they twist around each other almost
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like a braid of hair.
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And eventually, when you get up towards the femur,
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the PCl will often have a component that goes a
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little more distal part of the Humphrey ligament,
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and it may insert very far to create a broad,
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distant footprint along the
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anterior femoral condyle.
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Sometimes this footprint is misconstrued as a body
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or mass if you don't follow it back to the PCL.
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So because of this braided,
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tortuous course of the two bundles,
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anterolateral and postmedial,
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it's not common to really see an entrapped cyst.
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Now, I'm not a big fan of using the term ACl,
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ganglion or mucoid degeneration.
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Unless I see a confluent area of water signal that
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I can actually spot on a T2 weighted image where
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I really have some proteinaceous cystic fluid.
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If it's just swollen,
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I tend to avoid the term mucoid degeneration
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or ganglion formation,
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and I'll simply refer to it as notch cinovitis or
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notch inflammation secondary to micro instability
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and or dysplasia of the knee notch.
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But when I really can wrap my arms around focal,
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well defined, etched high signal,
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that's when the term mucoid degeneration,
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muco cyst formation, ganglion formation,
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are permissible in my world.
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So let's look at the other knee, the left knee.
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Look at that PCl. That is really bizarre.
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Been doing this a long time.
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You don't see this very often.
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There is on this fat suppressed T2 weighted image,
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there is a. Actually, it's a fat suppressed PD.
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I apologize.
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There is a focal area of well defined signal
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right there that is within the pcl.
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But we're not done yet.
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Let's follow it.
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And right there,
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it exits the pcl and busts out
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into the posterior capsule.
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Now, here's a regular T2 without fat suppression,
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illustrating again that this is a heavily
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proteinaceous fluid containing abnormality.
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It's not just swelling,
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it's not just inflammation.
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It is a mass inside the posterior cruciate
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ligament and busting outside the
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posterior cruciate ligament.
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Now, what is this? Pathologically?
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Pathologically,
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if you give this to somebody with a microscope,
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they're going to call it a ganglion.
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It's going to be proteinaceous fluid with
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a fibrous rim around the outside.
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It's not going to be synovial line.
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So if you want to call it an intra ligamentous
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ganglion with extra ligamentous extension,
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that's fine.
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If you want to call it mucoid degeneration with a
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mucous cyst and extension beyond the ligament,
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that's fine.
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Calling a capsuler cyst or a capsule synovial
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cyst, that's not fine because, first of all,
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there's no synovitis.
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Patient doesn't have a lot of joint fluids.
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It doesn't have a lot of capsillitis.
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It's not lined by synovium,
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so that wouldn't be fine.
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And it has a different connotation.
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So this is an example of a highly unusual
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tcl there with mucous cyst formation,
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ganglion formation,
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intra substance with extra ligamentous
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extension posteriorly.
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When you get these big cysts in the back,
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in the middle,
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you have to check on the popliteal vein and make
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sure there's no thrombosis. Let's move on,
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shall we?
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