Interactive Transcript
0:00
Let's take a case.
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And I'm just going to put one thing
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up on the screen at a time,
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and I'm going to start with a sagittal.
0:09
It's the youngest person, a young gish person,
0:13
and
0:14
usually with younger people,
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we're just talking meniscai today.
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When you're on the meniscal hunt,
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the sagittal is more valuable because the tears
0:25
tend to be in the back and in the front.
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This is just pure common sense.
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If you're dealing with a 65 year
0:31
old woman who has knee pain,
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almost all the tears are going to be
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right in the middle, right here.
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So the coronal projection is going to show the
0:39
overwhelming majority of tears
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in 60 year old men and women.
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So if you want to keep your job and you want
0:46
to be efficient, go to the coronal first.
0:49
In a 60 year old,
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if you're interested in meniscus in a child or
0:54
a young adult, go to the sagittal first,
0:56
just so you can be a little more efficient.
1:00
I'm going to
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make my line a little bit thicker here
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so you can see what I'm doing.
1:06
And let's start out with this
1:08
side view of a meniscus.
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So the meniscus looks a little bit like a
1:15
trapezoid. So I scroll out from the side,
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and I'm dealing with a younger person.
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I don't have the age in front of me,
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but I can tell just from the anatomy,
1:24
even though the growth plates are closed,
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probably someone around 18, 1920 years old.
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So that's young, right? And as we scroll,
1:32
the meniscus should break up into two triangles.
1:35
It doesn't.
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That's not primarily why I'm showing the case,
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but it sort of stays connected right here.
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But I'm showing it more for assessment
1:44
of the signals in the meniscus.
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Let's go over to the medial side for a moment.
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On the medial side, we have our two triangles,
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one in the back, one in the front.
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They are separated.
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They're nice and dark and black,
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unless I make the window a little brighter.
1:58
And now you can see those bundles I was talking
2:01
about before. Let's blow it up.
2:02
Let's make them in this guy really big,
2:04
because that's all we care about today.
2:06
There is some signal,
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and you can see the little tip of the bunny ear.
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There's one tip right there
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under my magnifying glass.
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There's the other tip under my magnifying glass.
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And now let's scroll over to the other side.
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Now, first lesson,
2:23
the meniscai in the overwhelming majority of the
2:29
world's population has more signal
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medial than lateral,
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and the reason is the normal knee walking angle.
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When you walk,
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your legs go down,
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and then they go out to the side a little bit.
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So there's always a little more pressure on the
2:44
inside than the outside because
2:46
there's more pressure,
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there's enhanced transmission of synovial fluid
2:50
through the medial knee compared
2:51
with the lateral knee.
2:53
So it's very unusual to have more signal
2:56
on the outside than the inside.
2:57
So it's okay to have a lot of signal on
2:59
the inside. In fact, in children,
3:01
they have an inordinate amount of signal
3:03
in the outer third on the inside,
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because that's where all the blood supply is.
3:08
So in a child,
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when you see lots of signal and it's not a tear,
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it's invariably normal vascularity.
3:15
But we'll get back to that in a moment.
3:17
So we're in a teenager young adult,
3:20
and we have more signal on the lateral than
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the medial side, so that rule is violated.
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Not only do we have more signal,
3:27
the signal is almost as bright
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as the highland cartilage,
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and it has this little thermometer bulb in the
3:33
front of it, which it's not allowed to have.
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And that little thermometer communicates with
3:39
the rest of the signal.
3:40
In other words,
3:40
it lines right up with it in the center,
3:42
never allowed to happen.
3:44
So if you've got a cyst near
3:45
a meniscus or a pseudocyst,
3:47
and it communicates right in the center,
3:49
it is coming from the meniscus.
3:51
Why is that important?
3:53
Because if you fix the cyst and you don't
3:56
mess with the tear, it comes right back,
3:57
like a month later.
3:58
So you got to deal with it from the inside out,
4:01
not from the outside in.
4:04
So let's go back to our meniscus for a moment.
4:07
We've got a meniscus.
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What are the characteristics of the meniscus that
4:12
I'm interested in. I'm interested in size.
4:16
I'm interested in the fact that the posterior horn
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is a little bit taller than the anterior Horn.
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I'm interested in how smooth it is.
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I'm interested in this internal signal that it's
4:30
faint, that there's no cyst formation,
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that it fades in the inner third.
4:36
I'm interested in the fact that
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there isn't any DJD around it,
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so I'm not going to call anything
4:41
meniscal degeneration.
4:43
I'm interested in the relationship between the
4:46
meniscus and the back free edge of the tibia.
4:48
Which should be about a centimeter or less.
4:50
You shouldn't really have any swelling back there.
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But if you've had an ACL tear,
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everybody has swelling, everybody has a sprain,
4:57
everybody has bleeding back there.
5:01
I'm interested in the fact that it's triangular.
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I'm interested in the fact that it's a little
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bit longer than its anterior counterpart.
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I'm interested in the fact that I know that the
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overwhelming majority of tears in this
5:14
age group are here, not here.
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So I'm going to be much tougher calling a tear
5:20
anterior medial than I will posteromedial.
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You're saying, well, you're playing the ods.
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Of course I'm playing the ods.
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That's what radiologists do.
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That's what good doctors do.
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They figure out the likelihood of something being
5:34
present. And if you go against the grain,
5:37
you better not be stupid.
5:39
You better be sure that you're right.
5:42
If you're going against the grain,
5:45
what else do we want to know?
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We want to know if the meniscus is twisted.
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We want to know if it's atrophic.
5:51
We want to know if it's been chopped.
5:54
How do we know if it's been chopped?
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Well, here's what a surgeon does.
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They go in there,
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and they start to trim and trim and trim.
6:01
Let's say we had a tear right here.
6:03
Let's say we had a complex tear that
6:05
they were going in to deal with,
6:07
and then maybe a little sort of
6:10
horizontal component. Well,
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they would trim and trim and trim.
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Maybe let's make another color just
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so our trimming is really clear,
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and it's a little more fun for me.
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So let's go pink. We're trimming, we're trimming,
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we're trimming. And the surgeon says, oh, okay,
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it looks a little better now.
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I better stop. So halfway into the meniscus,
6:30
they cease knowing full well that they have left
6:34
behind something inside this meniscus
6:36
in the middle of the outer third.
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But they can't take that out.
6:40
They can't sew that back together.
6:42
Or perhaps they can sew it,
6:44
but they can't resect it.
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So they always leave behind the middle and
6:48
outer third with some signal in it.
6:51
And when you chop back to this level, now,
6:55
this thing, which wasn't at the free edge,
6:57
is now at the new free edge.
7:00
That's called conversion signal.
7:03
So when you're dealing with
7:04
a postoperative meniscus,
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you are bound to see signal here forever.
7:09
After an ACL tear,
7:11
you're going to see vertical signal here forever.
7:14
How do you word it?
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Small,
7:18
stable appearing meniscal remnant with conversion
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signal. No signs of acute traumatic tear.
7:25
How do you know it's not acute?
7:27
It's not swollen, it's not displaced,
7:30
it's not gapped.
7:31
There's no contusion above or below it.
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There's no other signs of a new pivot shift.
7:36
Common sense stuff.
7:38
Here's another common sense thing.
7:40
Let's say they chopped it back to here.
7:42
Do you know how many times I've been in the
7:45
situation where somebody has had some signal over
7:48
here and they call it a tear in this tiny little
7:51
remnant that is of no consequence whatsoever to
7:56
the patient unless it gets ripped off and
7:59
stuck in the knee and causes locking.
8:01
That's absurd.
8:03
That's like making the cashier
8:05
take your extra penny.
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When you're paying $100 for a product and
8:09
she doesn't want to take your penny,
8:11
you force the penny down her throat.
8:14
Don't force the penny down their throat.
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Now, this structure is irrelevant.
8:20
What's relevant is all the chondromalacia that's
8:23
going to develop here 98% of the time.
8:26
That's why the patient comes in and has pain.
8:28
Your job is to see if it's that 1% where that
8:32
remnant is really doing something bad.
8:35
Twisting, turning, splitting, gapping, locking.
8:39
Otherwise, don't do an Mr.
8:41
Arthrogram, I don't care what the literature says.
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That is waste of time and money and of little
8:49
productivity to you or to the patient.
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