Interactive Transcript
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Okay,
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our next example is going to focus on the
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meniscal attachments and the roots.
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It's going to be a child.
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But let's start out blank screen
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and draw our meniscus again.
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When you're looking from the top down,
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it can be a little difficult to see the roots.
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They're kind of wispy.
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They dive down towards the tibia.
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So, you're going to have a posterior root,
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you're going to have an anterior root.
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You're also going to have an anchor.
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Not in everybody, but in most people,
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you're going to have an anchor in the front,
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which is known as the transverse
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meniscal ligament of Winslow
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that goes from meniscus to meniscus,
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to the other side.
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And yes,
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there is such a thing as a posterior
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transverse ligament.
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It occurs in about one in every 5000 individuals.
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So, you're not going to see it very commonly.
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We also said that on the medial side,
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for the most part,
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you're going to have short,
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stubby little attachments to the capsule,
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all the way around.
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But they're pretty tight.
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And because they're pretty tight,
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when you tug on Superman's cape,
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they're more likely to break.
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So, meniscal capsular true separations
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are more common on the medial
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than the lateral side
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because you just have less purchase,
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you have less play.
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We also said that the meniscus,
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when you view it in cross section,
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you can see in the mid coronal plane
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a little better, these attachments.
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They're a little bit longer
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than they are in the front and the back.
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And that's why most of the separations
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don't occur in the mid coronal plane.
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They occur where the attachments are shorter,
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in the front or in the back,
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mostly in the back.
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So, when you look in the mid coronal plane
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and let's say you've got the tibia underneath,
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we'll make the tibia blue also.
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And now, we'll draw the ligaments.
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Let's take the ligaments in green.
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You've got a meniscotibial ligament,
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also known as the coronary ligament.
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Again, best seen in the coronal plane,
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and a longer
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meniscofemoral ligament.
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And that one would go up to the femur.
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And I assume you can imagine the femur.
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So, that's the stabilization of
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the medial meniscus.
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Now, tears of the medial meniscus root are not
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uncommon in patients with a pivot shift.
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That tear can hit part of the root
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just like any other ligament.
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It can go all the way through the root,
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it can also go all the way through
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the depth of the root into the screen
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or all the way from anterior to posterior.
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So you can,
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if you have the resolution,
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differentiate what is complete from front to back
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and what is full thickness from top to bottom
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or from proximal to distal.
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Most of the time,
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root tears are not the entire ligament.
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You still have a little bit of ligament
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tethering the meniscus,
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and so it doesn't migrate all the way out
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or start slipping because there's no attachment.
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An equivalent to a root ligament injury,
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as we've previously discussed,
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would be as if you cleaved off
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a whole segment of meniscus,
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and now this portion of the meniscus migrates one way,
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and this part stays over with the root.
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Let's go over to the lateral meniscus.
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The lateral meniscus is actually
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a little more c-shaped.
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I should have made the medial meniscus a little
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more kind of banana shaped, but I didn't.
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You'll have to forgive me.
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The lateral meniscus is more c shaped,
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and the attachment story with regard
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to the root ligaments is the same.
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So, I'm not going to redraw them for you.
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You know,
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you can imagine they're kind of little wispy ligaments
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that go down towards the tibia.
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But the major difference on the
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lateral side is twofold.
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We've got arising from the popliteus hiatus,
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proximal, and on the lateral side,
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the popliteus tendon.
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So there's the popliteus tendon coming around,
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and it's going to become the popliteus muscle.
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Then we also have another ligament.
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That ligament is known as the
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ligament of Wrisberg.
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The ligament of Wrisberg will come off the
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posterior superior margin of the meniscus.
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And then if we were looking coronally,
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we're not right now.
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Here, we're axially,
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with the letter A.
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But if we were to look coronal,
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what would the Wrisberg ligament do?
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It would do something like this.
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It would come off the tip of the
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lateral meniscus right here.
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So, it would have an oblique course
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from the lateral meniscus superomedially.
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Now, that's a little hard to appreciate
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in the axial projection,
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but what you can appreciate is that the ligament
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of Wrisberg is going to have
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an interface between it
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and the meniscus,
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which I've drawn in green.
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And if you look at that interface
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in cross section...
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Let's do that.
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Let's make our meniscus blue again for consistency
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and let's assume we have a sagittal
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slice right here.
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What might we see
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at the interface of the Wrisberg ligament?
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Well, we'd see the interface in green,
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and then we'd have a little black structure,
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which you might confuse as a piece of meniscus.
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Well, it's not.
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It's the ligament.
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So, I'm going to color it yellow
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because I like yellow,
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but it's not really yellow on the image.
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On the image,
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it's going to be black because it's a ligament.
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And that appearance, that angle,
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that interface is going to persist for about
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two slices, and then it goes away,
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unless this area, which is weak,
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propagates a tear,
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which I'll make the tear in orange.
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So if a tear comes off here,
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now you've got something related to the
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interface of the ligament of Wrisberg,
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and we refer to these as
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the series of Wrisberg rips.
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But that's a story for another day.
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I'm interested in the overall anchoring
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of the meniscus and the roots.
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So, let's get back to the popliteus tendon.
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Let's look at a sagittal view at about
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the mid posterior horn level.
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So, let's draw our meniscus in blue
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for consistency.
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And behind it,
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we have the popliteus tendon,
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which then courses down.
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It sends a small little fascicle to the fibular
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head known as the popliteofibular ligament.
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It sends one over to the tibia,
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known as the popliteal tibial ligament,
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and there are two posterior penetrating fascicles.
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When you're close to the midline of the knee,
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one of these fascicles is going to be
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a little longer than the other.
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And when you're out towards the periphery
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of the knee, they change,
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then the bottom one gets a little longer.
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That's not so important, though.
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You have an upper fascicle and a lower fascicle,
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a set of ones near the midline
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and a set of ones near the periphery.
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So you have superolateral,
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inferolateral,
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superomedial,
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inferomedial,
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and they perforate the popliteus tendon,
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and they serve as anchors for the lateral meniscus,
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for when they're torn,
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this meniscus is going to start floating that way.
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