Interactive Transcript
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Now, let's go back over to the lateral side.
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And this is the only case we're going
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to seek to understand today.
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And I want to focus on a few terms.
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We're on the other side and I'd like
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you to notice that as we scroll,
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the meniscus really never comes back together.
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There's always a connection to the bow tie.
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That shouldn't happen. Right. If that happens,
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you've got meniscal dysplasia.
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The most common type of meniscal dysplasia is
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either an incomplete or a complete form of
0:32
discoid lateral meniscus, which this is.
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But I'm not so interested in the dysplasia
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right now. I'm interested in some terms.
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Okay, we've established that there is a dysplasia,
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but look at the signal.
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The signal is not just this sort of bunny
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ear signal. In the outer third,
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it keeps going into the middle
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third and the inner third,
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and it is equal in intensity compared to the
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outer third. That can never, ever happen.
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You are not allowed to have equal signal,
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if that's a word,
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in the inner third compared with the outer third,
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disallowed. Does that mean it's surgical?
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No. Does that mean it's abnormal?
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Yes.
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Lots of people have signal in the inner third.
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In fact, everybody does, who's over 860,
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because everybody over 860 has a cleavage tear,
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but we're not going to operate on it.
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So you got to learn to distinguish,
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you got to learn when to hold
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them and when to fold them,
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because if you fold them once the meniscus is out,
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you can never put it back in.
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There is no procedure that works
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where you can put it back in.
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Another important aspect of assessing this signal
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is the signal should never continue
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running all the way through.
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It should never run with equal
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intensity through the body.
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Let's see if I can convert back over for a minute.
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I'll try it.
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So let's see if that occurs here.
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Well, it isn't quite equal.
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It starts to faint in the middle third.
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So I don't think that phenomenon is very
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well illustrated here. But believe me,
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this tear is communicating all the way
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to the front. You might say, well,
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there's a tear here, there's a tear here.
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Maybe they're not connected. That's possible,
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but that's stupid. That's stupid stuff.
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You got a big giant tear that's the same shape as
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the one in the back and they're not connected.
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That's silly. Of course they have to be connected,
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even if you don't see it.
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It's just common sense.
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And you already know you have a dysplastic
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meniscus. And if you're a little educated,
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you know that meniscus splits right in the middle
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into two parts. So with a little bit of knowledge,
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which can sometimes be dangerous,
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you know that this entire cleavage
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signal has to be one thing.
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So don't try and over manipulate it.
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Don't try and overthink it.
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It's a meniscus that's turking into a turkey.
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It's turning into a turkey sandwich.
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What's happening is just this.
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See if my drawing tool works.
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Here it is in purple.
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Here's my discoid meniscus.
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The tear is just going right down the barrel,
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the center of the meniscus,
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right through those weaker collagen bands
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that are normal, that conducts an ovium.
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It's a little looser in there.
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Unfortunately, in these dysplastic meniscai,
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that loose area starts to come apart.
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And if you put it on the table and
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you turn it like this vertically,
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turn the meniscus vertically,
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the thing will go like this.
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This half will fall that way,
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that half will fall the other way.
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The meniscus will fall into two pieces.
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The two pieces of bread from
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the sandwich fall apart,
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and you got just a piece of turkey in the middle.
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It's horrible saying, oh, my God, what do you do?
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Nothing.
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Currently, the state of the art is,
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there is no good treatment for this scenario.
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But that's not why we're here,
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unfortunately.
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at some point, the meniscus blows.
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You got to leave it until it blows,
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and then it has to be resected.
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But there's more.
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Let's talk about what's happening in the front.
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In the front, we've got, as we said, this little,
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tiny, round, globular thing,
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which is a meniscal pseudocyst.
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Why is it a pseudocyst?
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Because it's not lined by epithelium or synovium.
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It's lined by fibrous tissue as opposed to
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a true cyst, which is epithelial line.
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So we say there's a perimeniscal small
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pseudocyst of meniscal origin
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that is four x 3 size.
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Sometimes you'll get them in the meniscus.
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That's okay. Just describe it.
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Sometimes out of the meniscus when they're really,
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really big,
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you may have to fix this and then resect from the
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outside, so you may have to go outside and inside.
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So then it really starts to matter if it's
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not a meniscal tear. Like a ganglion.
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It'll do something like this.
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It'll make a big mass.
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And it'll go above the meniscus.
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So the tail goes above, or the tail may go below,
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but it doesn't go in the center.
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So it's like belly buttons.
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Ganglia. Belly button. Audi. Audi.
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Whereas meniscal pseudocyst. Belly button.
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Right in the center. It's an innie.
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