Interactive Transcript
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So now, let's take a case.
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Here are two axial images.
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One, the one on your left is...
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The one on your left is T2,
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and the one on your right is a fat-suppressed 3D.
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We're going to work our way down to the meniscal level.
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So we start up high, we go down low,
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and we see a rather bizarre looking configuration.
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And I'm going to draw right over the
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top of it right now and blow it up,
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make it a little bigger.
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And we have this structure here,
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which you can see over here.
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And we also have this structure here.
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And what you're looking at are the native meniscus
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and a displaced piece of meniscus that has broken
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off with a gigantic gap in the center.
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Don't believe me?
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Let's look at our most favorite nation projection
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for a bucket handle tear, which is the coronal.
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Let's go to the coronal and scroll it.
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Now, we said when you have a bucket handle tear,
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you're going to have a rim.
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And here is our rim.
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It's a pretty small rim, isn't it?
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We might measure the rim from its
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outer third to its inner tip,
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and that might be only two or 3 mm,
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making it very difficult to sew to.
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So we have a very tiny rim.
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We said there's going to be a giant hole.
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Well, here's your giant hole right here.
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That's your giant hole.
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And we said we're going to have a piece that is
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displaced into the center of the knee underneath
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the posterior cruciate ligament.
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There is the piece displaced right underneath
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the posterior cruciate ligament.
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There's the posterior cruciate ligament.
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There's the piece immediately underneath it,
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the so called double pcl sign.
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Now let's scroll it.
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We go to the back,
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and all the way in the back,
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we're actually ripped off.
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We're missing a piece of the posteromedial corner.
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There's the meniscus with the meniscus root.
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Let's go forward.
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Meniscus got a little vertical tear in it at the
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capsule. There's a fragment. Let's keep going.
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Meniscus fragment. Meniscus fragment.
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Meniscus fragment. Meniscus fragment.
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And now they're going to come back together again.
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And there they are.
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They finally come back together all the way in
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the front. Now, what else can simulate this?
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There are two very important simulators
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of a bucket handle tear.
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One is an anterior large accessory bundle
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of the pcl that swings forward like this
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and inserts on the inside edge of
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the medial femoral condyle.
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Now, how do you know that's not a fragment?
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Because it's going to be dark,
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like a ligament or like a meniscus,
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because you can follow it right back
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to the PCO when you scroll it.
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That is a major cause of misdiagnosis
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of bucket handle tear,
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especially after someone's had a menacectomy,
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because now the meniscus looks small.
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You think, where'd it go?
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You find this extra ligament,
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you in your mind's eye, connect the two,
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and you think, you got a bucket handle tear.
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You don't.
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The meniscus have to come back together
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again or at least oppose each other.
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The other major cause of misdiagnosis
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of a discoid meniscus is this.
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If you've got a very tightly c shaped meniscus and
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you perform a coronal projection on at least a
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couple of cuts, you're going to get a meniscus,
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then a hole, then a meniscus.
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But that hole is just a normal curve.
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That's the normal cartilage surface.
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And if you have a little cinovitis in there,
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it might have a little fluid with it.
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So it's going to look like a little hole
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right there. And then on the next cut,
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you might have the same thing,
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but then it suddenly goes away,
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it looks normal again.
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And then you go up to the next cut,
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and all you see is a triangle,
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and it never separates,
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maybe from more than two cuts.
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So when you have a very tight c shaped meniscus
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that can simulate a bucket handle tear.
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Finally, let me just show you the sagittal.
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Just for completion's sake. Here's our sagittal.
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We'll blow it up a little bit.
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Here's our lateral meniscus.
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Let's go over to the medial side.
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We said that we were going to have a rectangular
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shaped or linear shaped structure that's extra.
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Well, here it is right here.
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This one's a little arc shaped.
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It sits right underneath the PCL,
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the so called double PCl sign of a bucket handle
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tear. And we go over to our medial meniscus,
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and our rim is pretty darn small.
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How does our rim look?
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Not so good.
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If we look very carefully.
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There's a big vertical tear in the back of our
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rim. There's another small vertical tear.
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There's some complex signal posteriorly.
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There's some complex signal anteriorly.
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Let's keep going. Oh,
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there's two structures there, just like we said,
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double anterior meniscus sign.
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Because a portion of this bucket handle
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tear has pushed forward in fact,
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the portion that's pushed forward is here.
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The native meniscus is shoved
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all the way in the front.
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So in this example,
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you've got something that looks like this.
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You've got your bucket that's pushed forward.
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There's your native meniscus,
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and here's your big hole.
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So there is your double meniscus sign.
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Native meniscus shoved anteriorly,
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bucket handle fragment pushed anteriorly.
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Double anterior horn sign of a bucket handle tear.
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So that concludes our discussion of bucket
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handle tears. You got the central type.
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You've got the anterior extended type.
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You got the posterior extended type.
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You got the complete free fragment type.
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The bucket fragment can twist, it can migrate,
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but when it migrates,
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it usually does so anteriorly.
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The classic bucket will go underneath
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the posterior cruciate ligament.
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It's important to assess the rim thickness and
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whether the fragment that you're trying
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to sew to itself also has a tear.
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And one final caveat.
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People that get bucket handle tears,
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they usually have some form of knee laxity.
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The most common form, ACL deficiency.
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This patient had a graft.
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The graft is attenuated proximally.
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In fact, it's torn as it enters the femur.
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This is an ACL deficiency.
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They go together like soup and sandwich.
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Bucket handle tear and ACl deficiency,
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very common.
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Medial is more common. It's about 60 40.
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Yeah, not uncommon. It.
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