Interactive Transcript
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37-year-old male,
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left knee MRI complex instability.
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Let's focus on the good old fashioned,
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fat weighted, T1 sagittal,
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lateral view, spin echo image.
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Immediately,
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I'm sure you all notice the aberrant
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position of the tibia.
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It is translated forward with the patient.
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Not even weight bearing.
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The patient is just lying on their back,
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and the femur is flopping backwards.
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This is known as the passive anterior
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tibial translation sign,
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telling us that the acl is no more.
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We can't find it. It is transected.
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But there's so much more.
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There are the typical fractures of a pivot shift
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injury involving the femoral terminal sulcus.
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This one's slightly depressed.
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There is a fracture of the posterolateral tibia.
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And there is also a fracture of the
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postural medial tibia, a big one,
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at a very important locus,
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the locus where the semimembranosus,
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one of the most important structures of the
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posteromedial corner, inserts. Now,
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when the semimembrnosis blows,
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it can either blow as an avulsion fracture
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or it can blow as a tendon tear.
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In my experience,
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it's more common to see it with an avulsion
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fracture like we have here,
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and this one is somewhat commonuted.
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So let's turn our attention now to
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our water weighted sagittal.
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Let's go right to that meniscus.
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The inferior aspect of the meniscus and its
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attachment to the capsule is blunted
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at the site of the fracture.
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It's also blunted in the suproposte apex,
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where the tibial arm of the pol reflects.
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So that is injured. The distal aspect of the pol.
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What else makes up the posteromedial corner?
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Well, the menisco capsule attachments do.
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Those are torn.
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We have a large globular area of blood and some
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fibrillated fibers. The meniscus itself does.
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Intrinsically, the meniscus itself is okay.
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The semimembranosus, it is not okay.
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It has five components, or five arms to it.
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A capsuler, an anterior,
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an inferior popliteal arm, a distal arm,
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and a direct arm. The direct is the most dominant,
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followed by the anterior arm,
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which is the second most dominant.
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And you can read about these and hear about
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them in some of our other vignettes.
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So here is a little bit of the semimembrnosis
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anterior reflected arm remaining.
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The rest of it is completely off and separated.
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So we have a semimembranosus,
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nearly complete avulsion of all the
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arms of the semimembrnosis,
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along with a meniscocapsular ligament injury,
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or meniscocapsular reflection tear.
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So two important components.
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The posteromedial corner, gone.
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We've also said the distal pol is gone.
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The posterior oblique ligament of the knee.
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How about the OPL,
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which is basically fused with the capsule?
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The capsule should be a nice straight structure,
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and it's not.
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It's actually ill defined and gray.
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It should look more like this.
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So the inferior capsule,
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which is fused with the OPL,
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the oblique papillateal ligament, it's torn.
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So now we have three components,
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perhaps four if you include the pol of the
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posteromedial corner that are gone.
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The only one that's really spared is the intrinsic
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tissue of the medial meniscus.
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We're not done yet, though.
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Let's focus back on the pol for a minute.
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We said the distal pol reflection right there.
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That gray structure is injured.
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But what about the rest of the pol?
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Well, let's go to this sagittal projection,
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which is right along the barrel,
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tangent to the tibial collateral ligament.
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Let's draw,
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the tibial collateral ligament has a middle layer.
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Well,
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the tibial collateral ligament is the middle
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layer. Sorry. It's layer number two of the MCl.
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Here's layer one right there.
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This is layer two, then the capsule.
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And meniscocapsular attachments
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make up layer number three.
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So I want to focus again on layer number two,
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the middle layer. There it is vertically oriented.
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I'm going to draw over it one more time in red.
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There's your tibial collateral ligament,
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middle layer of the MCl.
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Now I want to draw the pol.
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I'm going to make my line a little bit thinner,
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and I'm going to go for something like pink.
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Now there are upper fibers above the joint.
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They're very hard to see,
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but you actually can see them.
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They're a little wispy. They go like that.
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Those are the capsuler fibers of the pol.
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But these fibers,
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you can see these oblique ones right here,
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which form the tibial arm, the main arm,
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that goes towards that postro superior apex of the
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meniscus, the proximal portion. Looks good.
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Let's take it away so you can see it.
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There it is right there.
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That is the tibial arm of the pol.
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That's the main arm,
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also known as the central arm.
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Then there is a more distal component.
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You can kind of see it right here.
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If you really squint hard,
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kind of courses the other way, courses like this.
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And that would be the distal superficial arm,
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which is less important to us.
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So we see that the anterior component of the pol,
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while swollen, is intact.
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It's only the distal aspect
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of the central tibial arm,
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which we've identified at the postro superior
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corner of the meniscus. Let's go back to it again.
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Blunted posturo superior corner of the meniscus
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where the distal pol attaches the central tibial
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arm. That's torn. Semimembranosus,
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torn meniscocapsular reflection, torn capsule.
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Oblique popliteal ligament, torn.
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Four out of five,
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sparing only the meniscus intrinsic tissue itself.
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That's a nasty one. And by the way,
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the posterilateral corner was also torn.
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