Interactive Transcript
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Now, let me just finish with a few other thoughts.
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This is discoid lateral meniscus,
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huge horizontal tear, mostly intrameniscal.
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And yes,
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there is a little radial component of the tear.
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And in the next session,
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we're going to talk about
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the different types of tears.
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But right now,
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I just want you to get a feel overall
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for how to address menisci,
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and review a little more anatomy before we quit.
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Some terms that you're going to hear us use
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day in, day out, didactic, non-didactic for patients.
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First, a term everybody uses.
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Severe.
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You say severe,
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you mean you think this is horrible enough
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to warrant an intervention?
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Severe means something.
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Another word,
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incidental.
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That means I see it.
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I'd like other radiologists to know I saw it,
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but that's all I care about.
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It's unrelated, it can't be fixed.
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It has nothing to do with the
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patient's clinical syndrome.
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Contralateral to the side of the patient's symptoms,
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same thing,
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means don't touch it.
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Chronic
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means it's been there a long time.
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If you want to touch it, you're taking a risk.
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Degenerative.
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If you want to say degenerative,
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there better be degeneration,
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there better be DJD,
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there better be flattening of the femur,
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deformity of the tibia, chondromalatia.
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If you have high signal in the outer third
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of a 12-year-old, it's vascularity.
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It's not degeneration, as we discussed.
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Displacement.
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Displacement means simply that.
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One structure
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is displaced relative to another.
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It's a lead in for other descriptors.
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So, let's talk about maybe one or two
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of those descriptors.
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Let's talk about displacement.
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The menisci should line up
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with the outer edge of the femur and the tibia
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on both sides
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in a healthy person lying on the back.
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But what if they're lying on their back
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and the meniscus starts to do something like this?
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Meniscus starts to pooch out a little bit
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like that.
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Yeah, my lines are a little fat,
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but that's okay.
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Now, the patient didn't have trauma.
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They're lying on their back.
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They're not even standing up.
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The hoop stresses that push the meniscus around
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are not in play.
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They're lying on their back
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having a cup of coffee
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while the MR is going on.
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So, what's going on here?
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From walking and from the change in shape
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of the femur, and from running,
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and from years and years of use and abuse
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the attachments of the meniscus.
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Perhaps, these attachments here,
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the menisco tibial and femoral attachments,
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or the root ligament attachments,
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which I can show you.
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Here they are.
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Here's a root ligament attachment right there.
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Let's put an arrow on it.
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Right here.
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There's the root ligament attachment.
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These stretch out.
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So I refer to this phenomenon,
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personally, as pseudo extrusion.
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Or you can say meniscocapsular laxity
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due to the wear and tear of activities
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of everyday living,
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or if there's DJD,
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associated with DJD.
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When do I use the term meniscal extrusion?
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When I define that one of those
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attachments is actually torn,
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or the meniscus has decided to take a trip,
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south towards Georgia.
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In other words,
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it goes down along the tibial gutter here,
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or it goes up in the parafemoral gutter,
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then I use the term true meniscal extrusion.
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Now, if you have a meniscus that is
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ripped off and spit out,
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or a meniscus that is ripped off and thrown
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into the center of the joint,
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that's true extrusion.
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Or another synonym for that is
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meniscocapsular separation.
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Another term that is related to shape,
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although I'm not going to get into shapes today.
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That's for the next talk, is cleavage.
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I picked that one out
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because everybody knows what a cleavage is,
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right?
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It's a horizontal line.
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So, if I see a nice horizontal line
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and it's not a 20-year-old,
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and I have DJD,
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cleavage is the lead in to tell you
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this is going to be a chronic tear
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that everybody has when they're 60 years old.
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Chronic, cleavage, trizonal, body tear,
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everybody's got that.
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Don't touch those tears.
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So, cleavage can be a word used to downplay.
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Finally,
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the last thing I want to emphasize is
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the concept of meniscal failure.
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What does failure mean?
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Failure means the meniscus
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isn't doing its job anymore.
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All day long,
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failure after failure, after failure.
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We see here at PSI,
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people that are too heavy.
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The meniscus just couldn't hold up for 50 years
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under the onslaught of 280 pounds.
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And the meniscus gradually pseudo extrudes
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and displaces and displaces, and displaces,
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and it no longer supports the joint.
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And then, the joint develops arthritis,
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and the bones misshapen,
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and that pushes it out even further,
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and you're not even doing a standing MRI.
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That is one type of failure.
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Another type of failure is the meniscus auto digests.
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There's not much left of it.
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In that case, too,
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it is not supporting the knee.
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Now, if you have a small meniscus,
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you've got to go through,
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and we will go through this,
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the important laundry list of causes
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for why the meniscus is small.
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The most common cause,
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far and away, is resection.
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Another important cause is an old tear
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with a piece that got digested,
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maybe an old bucket handle tear that got missed.
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Another important cause is simple
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autodigestion from arthritis.
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Yes, arthritis,
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especially rheumatoid, will,
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with its enzymes,
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destroy and dissolve the meniscus,
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just like you can normally destroy and dissolve
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an extruded disc herniation in your back.
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Yes, your body can take it away.
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Another cause of a very small meniscus is
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one that has fragmented and separated,
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not a classic bucket handle tear, but again,
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one that has broken up into innumerable pieces.
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And finally,
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another cause of a small meniscus
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is pseudo extrusion,
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where you're through the part of it
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that is just very thin.
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In other words,
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the whole meniscus is shifted
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and you think it's small,
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but when you look at the coronal,
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you see the fat part,
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but the fat part isn't where it's supposed to be.
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It's pseudo extruded out into the
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medial aspect of the knee.
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So, go through your appropriate checklist
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of small menisci.
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Yes, there is such a thing
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as congenital absence of the meniscus.
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It's usually posterolateral,
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It's extremely rare.
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I've seen about five of them in my entire life,
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which is pretty long, so it's not a common thing.
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So that concludes our initial discussion
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of menisci for today.
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When we come back and review menisci
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in our next session,
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we're going to talk about meniscal anatomy.
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We're going to go through all the roots.
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This is obviously a meniscal cleavage tear
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in our discoid meniscus.
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We're going to talk about all the root ligaments,
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all the individual attachments,
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the variations of the menisci,
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the dysplasias of the menisci,
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and we're going to show the individual
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meniscal tear shapes,
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and we're going to drill again and again
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into meniscal extrusion,
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pseudo extrusion,
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failure,
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severity,
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unstable versus stable menisci,
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displacement,
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nondisplacement,
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full-thickness tears,
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partial thickness tears,
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chronic tears,
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acute tears,
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atraumatic, a very important word,
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versus traumatic,
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means you probably should fix it.
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Atraumatic,
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probably you shouldn't fix it.
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Cleavage in other shapes, incidental,
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non incidental.
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Thanks.
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Back to you shortly.
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