Interactive Transcript
0:00
An older adult woman who complains
0:02
of knee swelling,
0:04
but no discrete history of trauma.
0:08
Let's scroll the axial fat-suppressed
0:11
water emphasized image first,
0:13
and that is a swollen extremity.
0:16
There's swelling everywhere.
0:17
There's swelling in the joint.
0:18
There's swelling around the joint.
0:20
And while we're here,
0:21
let's take a quick gander at the ACL.
0:24
It's nice and straight and linear.
0:26
It's intact.
0:27
The PCL,
0:28
it's nice and round and robust,
0:31
and we can follow it from bottom to top.
0:34
It's intact.
0:36
So we probably have to look elsewhere to determine
0:40
what is causing such a severe pattern of swelling.
0:44
When you look inside the effusion,
0:46
you do not see a blood fluid level.
0:50
You do not see synovial hypertrophy.
0:53
Therefore,
0:54
a rheumatologic explanation isn't very likely.
0:58
You don't see clots and you also don't
1:01
see bone erosion or destruction,
1:03
as you might in aseptic arthritis.
1:06
So right now, we have a little bit of an enigma.
1:10
While you're scrolling through the axial,
1:13
you should always take note of the popliteal
1:17
fossil because patients can develop clots from
1:20
swelling like this due to encroachment
1:23
on the popliteal vein,
1:24
and the flow voids are not very prominent.
1:27
So that should be a potential area of concern.
1:30
But that's not why we're here,
1:32
although I guess it could be with a swollen lower
1:34
extremity. But let's keep going, shall we?
1:37
I've got two sagittals up,
1:39
and the goal of this review is to
1:41
take you through the corners,
1:43
specifically the posteromedial corner.
1:45
So I'm going to stop at the posterolateral corner
1:47
for a minute. And, yes, there is a meniscus tear.
1:50
It's chronic looking, it's complex.
1:52
That's going to go in the conclusion
1:54
with the word chronicity.
1:56
And there is class four chondromalacia present
1:58
both on the tibial side and the femoral side
2:02
surrounding this complex, macerated meniscus.
2:06
There is also a popliteus tendon with
2:09
a popliteofibular ligament rupture,
2:12
so that is blunted. And here is the arcuate,
2:15
which should come down and attach to the tip of
2:17
the fibula. It's just hanging down in the back,
2:20
so the arcuate is torn, too.
2:22
So there's a posterolateral corner injury.
2:25
Let's keep scrolling now and
2:26
go over to the medial side.
2:29
Now, on the medial side,
2:31
there's also meniscus pathology.
2:34
There is an oblique under surface,
2:37
chronic appearing tear. Why do I say chronic?
2:39
Because it's not that bright.
2:41
She's older,
2:42
and she also hasn't had a history of trauma.
2:44
What does older have to do with it?
2:46
When you get older, you get more signal,
2:48
you get more incidental degeneration
2:50
and chronic tears in the meniscus.
2:53
But we're here to talk about the corners,
2:55
so I'm going to move my image over a little bit,
2:58
and I'm going to blow this one up.
3:01
And what makes up the posteromedial corner?
3:04
Well, the posterior oblique ligament of the knee,
3:06
or the pol, the OPL,
3:08
the oblique popliteal ligament,
3:11
the semimembranosus and its five expansions,
3:14
or arms,
3:15
the medial meniscus
3:17
and its attachments, which are very swollen.
3:22
You can't really see an interface between the
3:23
meniscus and any other tissue other than boggy,
3:27
hyperintensed tissue. And finally, the capsule,
3:31
and the meniscocapsular attachments,
3:33
which are also obliterated by this swelling.
3:36
So immediately we've identified that the
3:40
meniscocapsular reflection is severely diseased.
3:44
How about the semi membranosis?
3:46
Wow. The semi membrinosis is hanging down.
3:50
It's pointing towards Florida.
3:52
It should actually point towards Texas.
3:54
There are five expansions,
3:57
or arms of the semi membrinosis,
3:59
the main one being the direct deep arm.
4:02
The second important one, which is seen here,
4:05
is the anterior arm,
4:07
also known as the pars reflexa,
4:08
or reflected portion of the semimembrnosis.
4:11
So the main arm,
4:13
the direct arm of the semimembrosis
4:14
has been pulled off.
4:16
So now we have at least three components.
4:20
There's a meniscal injury,
4:21
although it's pretty low grade.
4:22
There's a more serious meniscal capsuler injury.
4:26
The main attachment of the semimembrnosis
4:28
is pulled off. What do we have left?
4:31
We have the OPL, the oblique popliteal ligament,
4:36
that is not seen as a separate structure
4:39
because it merges with the capsule.
4:40
But let's follow the capsule down.
4:42
It should be a clean, straight, black structure,
4:45
and it is to right there.
4:47
And then at that point,
4:49
we see a spidery web of low signal intensities.
4:54
That is the torn, retracted capsule.
4:58
So if the capsule is torn, the OPL,
5:01
or oblique popliteal ligament got to be torn.
5:04
So another component of the posteromedial corner
5:07
is torn. How about the last component, the pol,
5:14
the posterior oblique ligament of the knee?
5:16
It's got three components.
5:18
It's got a superior capsuler component,
5:21
also known as the superior arm.
5:24
It's got a central tibial component which is the
5:27
main component that kind of slopes back like this.
5:30
And then it's got a distal superficial
5:32
arm that goes a little more forward.
5:34
Now let's look at the medial collateral ligament,
5:39
or the tibial collateral ligament,
5:41
which is the middle layer of the MCl,
5:43
which is this black band right here.
5:45
Behind it is going to be,
5:48
and I'll pick another color.
5:50
Behind it is going to be the more broad arcing
5:54
pol, which kind of has this shape.
5:57
I made it orange.
5:58
Maybe I should have picked another color.
6:00
Let's pick green.
6:01
So the pol
6:04
is behind it,
6:05
and it kind of has sort of a
6:06
triangular configuration.
6:08
And you should be able to see wispy oblique fibers
6:11
going this way from super anterior
6:14
to postero inferior,
6:15
and then going this way from superoposterior
6:18
to antero inferior.
6:19
Then these fibers will kind of come down and wrap
6:23
around the back of the knee to merge with the
6:25
posteromedial capsule. Now let's take it away.
6:28
Do you see fibers with that course behind the
6:31
tibial collateral ligament? No, you don't.
6:34
You might see something running up and down
6:36
right here, but after that it is a mess.
6:40
All you see is ill defined hyperintense
6:44
signal intensity.
6:46
Now let's go to the coronal projection
6:51
to seek out our pol,
6:53
our posterior oblique ligament of the knee,
6:56
which is one of the most important structures
6:59
of the postural medial corner,
7:00
along with the semimembrnosis and its expansions.
7:04
So let's pull down our water weighted
7:07
coronal and our T1 coronal.
7:09
I'm going to blow them up a little bit just
7:11
to make it a little easier for you to see.
7:13
Make them a little lighter.
7:15
Now, admittedly,
7:17
the patient has some meniscal pathology,
7:20
quite a bit of meniscal pathology,
7:21
but that's not why we're here,
7:22
both on the lateral side and the medial side.
7:25
And let's scroll.
7:27
I want you to look at the scroll for a minute,
7:30
and I'm sure you've recognized the
7:32
tibial collateral ligament,
7:34
which is the middle layer of the MCl.
7:37
layer number two.
7:39
Now follow the tibial collateral ligament forward.
7:44
It's a little swollen. Now follow it backwards.
7:48
There's the meniscofemoral attachment.
7:51
There's the menisco tibial attachment.
7:53
This is layer number three of the MCl.
7:55
Let's keep going back because immediately
7:57
behind the tibial collateral ligament,
8:00
layer two of the MCl, you should run into the.
8:04
You should be running into it right now.
8:07
Might be a little pol.
8:09
That might be a little pol.
8:12
There's the broken pol. Let me make it bigger.
8:16
That should be a sweeping, contiguous structure.
8:19
There should not be a gap right here.
8:22
That is a pol tear.
8:25
So the trick is to follow the TCl,
8:28
tibial collateral ligament,
8:29
or middle layer of the MCl.
8:30
Back becomes quite attenuated, then gone.
8:34
So it's injured here, torn there.
8:37
It helps anchor or check the movement of the
8:41
meniscus along with the rest of
8:43
the posteromedial corner.
8:45
Now,
8:46
I put the T1 up so that you could see the
8:48
chondromalatia and some of the skeletal changes,
8:51
but it's much harder to recognize the ligaments on
8:54
the T1 than it is on the water weighted image.
8:57
So this patient has a pol tear,
9:00
a semimembranosus avulsion,
9:03
and a meniscocapsular ligament injury or tear.
9:08
Therefore,
9:10
they have lost the stabilization of the postural
9:12
medial meniscus and what we call the brake stop
9:15
mechanism of the postural medial meniscus.
9:17
But she has other problems that
9:19
I put into the conclusion,
9:20
including chronic chondromalacia meniscal pseudo
9:23
extrusion, chronic meniscus tears.
9:26
I described their length, their complexity,
9:29
their shape, et cetera,
9:31
and I would also add a pertinent
9:32
neg in the body of the report,
9:34
because the injury is pretty impressive
9:36
that the ACL and the PCL are intact.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.