Interactive Transcript
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Okay.
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So today,
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we're going to start out with bucket handle tears.
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We're into the menisci once more,
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and I would encourage you to go back and look at
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our first two forays into the meniscai to
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learn a little bit more about anatomy.
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But we're going to drill a little bit deeper today
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into the concept of bucket handle tears.
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So let me draw my meniscus,
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and I will try,
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do my best to make it somewhat three dimensional.
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And we've said in the past that bucket handle
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tears usually begin as vertical,
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longitudinal tears. They're often in the middle,
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and usually these vertical,
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longitudinal tears in the middle don't persist
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as simply vertical tears. They do progress.
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And I've had innumerable instances,
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especially of professional athletes,
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that chronically complain of pain and kind
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of a vague sensation of clicking the.
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Mr. Is absolutely normal.
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And then when you go back in retrospect,
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you can see a quarter of a millimeter line through
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the center of the meniscus that was barely
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visible. That, even in retrospect, is hard to see.
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And that was the initiation of what eventually
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became a meniscus that split into two parts,
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a so called bucket handle tear.
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So there's kind of a pre bucket type
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pain syndrome that may occur.
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Now,
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these vertical tears will start to widen and gap,
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and they'll get a little bigger and a
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little bigger and a little wider,
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such that this portion of the meniscus starts to
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migrate inwards in the typical
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classic bucket handle tear.
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So you get something that looks
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a little bit like this
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with a big hole in the center.
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Now,
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if you were to perform a coronal slice through
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here such as this, what might you see?
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You would see a truncated portion of the meniscus
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that looks like it's chopped right there,
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and it's going to have a specific
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rim to it or width to it.
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And that's important because they're
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going to have to sew one piece,
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namely this inside piece right here,
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which looks something like this,
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back to it.
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So if you have a very thin rim out here,
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it's nice to know what you're sewing to.
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You also want to know if this rim has a
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horizontal tear in it, which it may,
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which decreases the likelihood that you can
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sew Humpty Dumpty back together again.
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Now, what's going to be in here?
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Blood, inflammatory tissue, a little bit of fluid,
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but this configuration is going to persist
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slice after slice after slice.
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You're going to see it here,
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you're going to see it here.
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You're going to see it here,
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and then all of a sudden it's going to go away.
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The meniscus is going to come back together again
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unless the bucket handle tear goes
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all the way out the front.
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So the bucket handle tear could do this,
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and even this piece can start to sort
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of migrate in. Let's erase.
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Let's get our eraser up here a little bit.
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Erase that piece. And now you've got this big,
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huge fragment all the way in the front,
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but not quite all the way to the back.
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So the separation will persist all the way in the
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front and continue on as you go back with a series
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of coronal slices until you get
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all the way into the back.
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Now,
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there could be what we call
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the free fragment bucket.
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I've just illustrated for you one that extends all
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the way anterior, the so called anterior bucket.
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I showed you initially the classic bucket,
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the one in the center.
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But let's take the situation where
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we have the free fragment bucket.
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So here we've got the outer rim,
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and then here we've got a piece right here,
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and they're not attached to each other anymore.
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They're kind of squished down
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by the femur and the tibia.
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So then you're going to get something where
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you have a truncated meniscus in the back.
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Let's change colors, actually,
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a truncated meniscus in the back because
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this was attached back here,
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maybe another area of truncation.
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And then continued separation of two fragments
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all the way from front to back,
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so you never see these two fragments
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join ever again.
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And it's even possible for this piece,
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which I will use my little
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light blue drawing here.
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It's even possible for this piece to go all the
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way back and for you to have two pieces in the
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coronal plane like this on every single Slice.
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That's what I call a coast to coast,
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or a complete anterior to posterior bucket
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handle tear with a free fragment.
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All right,
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so now let's erase and start with a clean slate
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and show you a few other configurations
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of buckets.
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So let's assume we have a bucket handle tear with
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a big hole. It started out as a vertical tear.
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Here's our hole.
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And now this piece,
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which is still attached by a little
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twig here in the back,
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kind of migrates forward and it can dip
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right underneath the anterior horn,
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in which case, when you perform a sagittal view,
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it may look like you have a piece of meniscus here
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and a piece of meniscus right behind it.
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In fact, it may bolster up right underneath it.
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So you have these two meniscoid looking
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structures. You do a sagittal,
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and you've got a double meniscus sign.
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Or this could happen.
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You could have the same thing,
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a big hole in the middle, pardon my squeaking,
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a huge tear. And then this time,
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our piece kind of wanders in
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front of the anterior horn
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and looks something like this.
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Again, another double meniscus sign.
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If we do a sagittal,
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you'll see two meniscal looking structures.
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And to make matters more complex,
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you might have a transverse ligament
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lurking here anteriorly.
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So you might have a little round structure and
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a triangulated structure or some deformed
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triangulated structure and
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another one behind that.
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And then you might even have another little
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rim before you run into this hole.
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So it can get rather complex.
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You can have two, three,
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and even four areas of hypointensity
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in the anterior aspect of the knee.
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Now, do buckets ever do the opposite?
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Do they ever go backwards posteriorly?
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Not very commonly.
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Most of the time they do migrate anteriorly,
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but they can twist.
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So if this thing's pretty narrow,
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you can get a pedicle.
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And the bucket handle tear can
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actually turn on itself,
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which makes things rather complex.
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Now, this piece of the bucket right here,
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which I've colored in green,
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that's the part that you're going to see on a sag.
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Let's make our sagittal view nice and blue.
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Our sagittal slice goes through it.
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And you're going to see a bow tie looking or
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rectangular structure in one
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of these central slices.
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And that structure may sit right underneath
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the arcing posterior cruciate ligament.
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That's going right over top of it,
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creating the double pcl sign
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of a bucket handle tear.
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