Interactive Transcript
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Here is a patient with signal in the lateral meniscus. Let's go all the way to the root.
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Here's our root,
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which we said is usually kind of a sloped triangle
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or a truncated triangle.
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And what's this?
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It's a swollen area of tissue.
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Hard to define what it is on one cut.
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But let's keep going, shall we?
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Around area of tissue.
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The transverse meniscal ligament,
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which looks a little strange.
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And now they start to come together,
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and we have some interdigitation
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and some attachments anteriorly.
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And now, they don't come together.
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Well, we said that was the transverse ligament,
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but Wait a minute.
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That's the meniscus. That's a space.
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That's a ligament. That's an attachment.
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Let's keep going, shall we?
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It's still there, but it's not round.
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If it's a ligament, why isn't it round?
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Let's keep going. Still not round.
1:05
Still not round.
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Still not round.
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And it's actually into the body of the meniscus
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now. Well, let's go back for a minute.
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What I convinced you was a transverse
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ligament was not.
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It's a fragment of meniscus that broke off.
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There was no transverse ligament.
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That's a piece of meniscus.
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That's a piece of meniscus.
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That's a piece.
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That's a piece.
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That's a piece.
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That's a piece.
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That's a piece. That is a piece.
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And so it goes all the way into the body with this
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obliquely oriented tear with a cleavage
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component that finalizes in the body.
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And you can see it coronally, too.
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There it is.
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There is no transverse ligament going
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from meniscus to meniscus.
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There is the root attachment.
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There is your giant tear,
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and the fragment is in front of this particular
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slice. So a large, complex,
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oblique cleavage tear with a fragment
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of meniscus anteriorly,
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whose true ideology is displayed in the fact
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that on every single sagittal slice,
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all the way from the root to the body, persists.
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And that's how you make the diagnosis of an
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anterolateral tear with these complex
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anatomic characteristics.
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In the next five minutes,
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I want to just talk about the concept of
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extrusions.
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And I don't mean the kind in your back.
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I mean the kind in your knee.
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What you say the meniscus does displace in the
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knee. You're walking around all day long,
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and you've got these hoop stresses that are
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pushing down on a structure that looks somewhat
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like this. It actually isn't a triangle.
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It has a nice little slope in it to accommodate
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the femur, which I've drawn here in yellow.
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And the femur drives down into
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the meniscus and pushes it.
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Unfortunately,
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when we're young and healthy and vibrant,
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in other words, under age 60,
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the meniscus can tolerate it because the
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attachments are nice and tight and firm.
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But as we get a little bit older,
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or if we abuse the meniscus by running ten k every
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day and we start driving the femur
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down onto that meniscus,
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the attachments may get looser and
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stretchier and more plastic,
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and the meniscus starts to displace out of
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a line between the edge of the femur.
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We'll draw that line between the edge of
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the femur and the edge of the tibia.
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So the meniscus starts to migrate
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beyond that line,
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and that may be the primary cause of
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DJD or osteoarthritis of the knee,
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or it may be a secondary phenomenon.
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Once osteoarthritis begins and we get a little
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synovial hypertrophy and inflammation,
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the ligaments digest,
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the meniscus starts to get a little plastic
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and deformed, and it starts to move out,
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and then the arthritis gets worse,
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and it's a vicious cycle.
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We here at proscan refer to
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this as pseudo extrusion,
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or plastic deformation of the meniscal
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attachments due to arthritis.
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Now, what's a true extrusion?
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A true extrusion for us means one of two things.
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The attachments have given way.
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In other words, something's ruptured,
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allowing the meniscus to be displaced or extruded,
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either out peripherally or in towards
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the middle of the knee.
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I also reserve it for one other situation,
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and that is when the meniscus does this.
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When the meniscus is squished out like
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toothpaste coming out of a tube,
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it's starting to get pushed out this way,
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and it starts to migrate down the paratibial
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or migrate up the paraphemeral gutter,
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just to be a little clearer.
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This would be the femur, this would be the tibia.
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So now the meniscus is starting to prolapse along
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the free edge of the tibia or the free edge
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of the femur. In that scenario, also,
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I'll use the term extrusion of the meniscus,
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or displacement extrusion of the meniscus in
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the periphemeral or the peritibial gutter.
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Let's take a quick look.
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Here's exactly just that here's our meniscus,
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and our meniscus is truncated.
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We'll get to that in a moment.
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You already know one cause of truncation is a
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bucket handle tear. But not the case here.
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This is the most common cause of truncation.
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The surgeon. The surgeon did it.
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They truncated the meniscus.
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They went and cut the inner
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portion of the meniscus,
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which actually has a lot to do with the meniscus
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extrusion or displacement along the paratibial
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gutter. And here it is right there.
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Our meniscus is in trouble.
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And this patient is lying on their back.
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They're not even standing up.
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There's no hoop stress driving down,
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pushing the meniscus out.
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When the patient is standing,
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it's even more extruded.
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Why did this occur?
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Because the meniscus
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got chopped right here and now.
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When you drive the femur down into a structure
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that is now paper thin and irregular
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and has lost some of its depth,
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you know from physics that that produces a
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scenario that enhances the pushing effect
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of the meniscus to one side.
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And most of the forces are coming down and
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out and down and out on both sides.
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So the mere fact that there's a trimming
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increases the likelihood,
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the physical likelihood that a meniscus experience
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produces more downward force, more hoop stress,
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and greater likelihood of displacement,
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and therefore,
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displacement into the paraphemeral and peritibial
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gutter, rendering it useless.
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So menasectomies are not to be taken lightly.
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And we'll talk about later on what circumstances
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they are absolutely indicated. Thanks.
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Bye.
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