Interactive Transcript
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Knee anatomy, tendons on MRI. We begin with the medial compartment,
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looking at the sausage shaped sartorius muscle, which becomes a tendon.
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Muscles become tendons which insert on bone. Ligaments go from bone to bone,
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or occasionally from a ligament to bone. So we've got a trident shaped
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group of tendons, the sartorius, the gracilis, and the semitendinosus, known
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as the pes anserinus. Let's cross reference the pes anserinus in the sagittal
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projection. Look at how far posterior it is, and then as we go
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more medially, we see it swing around and have a fairly distal insertion
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footprint on the tibia. It is far more distal and far more anterior
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than its kissing cousin, the semimembranosus. For a moment, let's just take
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a look at the pes anserinus in the coronal projection. Here it is,
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and as we follow it distally, look at how far down and distal
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it inserts on the tibia. Way lower than the semimembranosus, which in the
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coronal is up here. So let's tackle the semimembranosus. In the sagittal
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projection, it's a large, thick structure, oft underappreciated, as it's
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a posteromedial stabilizer with five expansions sitting immediately behind
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the meniscocapsular reflection. Where is it actually? It's right here.
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It comes from a very large muscle. Riding on the back of that
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muscle is the semitendinosus, which becomes part of the pes. But the semimembranosus
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goes down and inserts along the back of the tibia with,
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to be discussed later on, its five expansions.
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Now let's go to the back of the knee, where we have the
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high takeoff of the gastrocnemius medial head on the medial side,
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co mingling with the capsule, a common site for ganglion pseudocysts to
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occur. And on the lateral side, also a pretty high takeoff of the
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gastrocnemius lateral head, with a small, separate, linear, dark structure
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just deep to it, the origin of the plantaris. This is also another
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common site where ganglia may occur. Now let's take on the popliteus tendon,
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which unlocks the screw home mechanism in the knee. It has a fairly
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circuitous course. Let's go to the popliteus hiatus. In this patient,
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it's identified by a little bit of fluid with the origin footprint of
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the popliteus tendon. And then we can follow the popliteus tendon down,
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and sometimes that is easier to do in the coronal projection.
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So let's do it. We go to the popliteus hiatus, which by the
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way is below the origin of the FCL, or fibular collateral ligament.
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We follow our tendon down. It makes a little curve and then has
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an antero infero medial course as the obliquely oriented popliteus muscle.
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Here is the popliteus tendon in the sagittal projection. We'll see later
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on it has important attachments to the tibia and fibula. The biceps femoris
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comes from a large muscle with long and short heads. You can see
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two separate segments of the biceps femoris right here. And it inserts on
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the fibular head as the conjoined tendon along with the fibular collateral
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ligament. Even though conjoined tendon is somewhat of a misnomer, they come
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together to form this fairly broad footprint along the lateral aspect of
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the fibular head. Let's see if we can identify the biceps femoris in
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the sagittal projection. Here it is right here.
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It's got a fairly posterior position. There's a little bit of signal inside
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it. That's not pathologic, probably from just simply wear and tear.
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But you see the relatively broad footprint of the biceps femoris,
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which merges imperceptibly with some fibers of the fibular collateral ligament.
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Now let's go to the front where we've got the quadriceps tendon,
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which is somewhat striated. Let's look at it sagittally. It's striated because
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it's made up of four structures, the rectus femoris, the vastus intermedius,
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the vastus lateralis, and the vastus medialis. So sometimes you'll see a
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little bit of fat inside it. It oft has a little bit of
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linear streaky fluid inside it. And you may see a little bit of
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hyperintensity around it. It then continues on as the prepatellar plate.
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Here's your plate. An oft overlooked structure that may get injured when
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you fall. And then continues on as the patellar tendon, inserting on the
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tibial tubercle. And as we go down, here's our patellar tendon with an
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oval shape, convex anterior, concave posterior, connected to
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the inferomedial parapatellar retinaculum and the inferolateral parapatellar
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retinaculum. Let's look at these structures in the coronal projection. Here's
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the quadriceps with its striated appearance above the patella. And here
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is the patellar tendon, the plate hard to see because we're tangent or
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on foss to this structure. And then a couple of less important structures
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down lower. The tibialis anterior and the peroneus, which are going to insert
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on the tibia. And that concludes our discussion of the major tendons of
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the knee.
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