Interactive Transcript
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So now, let's go back to the case.
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Here's our axial,
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and we now know something bad happened.
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We got blood in the joint.
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We already know we've got a fracture.
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Something violent happened during the pivot shift.
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There's a lot more information on here.
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We can tell what's medial and what's lateral by
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looking at the patella. There's the medial facet.
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It. The cartilage is a little bit fatter.
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It's usually a little shorter than the lateral
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facet. So this would be lateral.
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This would be medial.
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And we get a quick glance at the MCL.
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We get a quick glance at some of the lateral
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collaterals. That's not the story today.
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The story is the meniscus.
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So let's have a look at the meniscus coronally.
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First thing you ought to notice is the
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lateral meniscus is too small.
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I mean, normally,
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the medial meniscus is bigger than the lateral
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meniscus, or it's at least as visible.
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We have a nice triangle on the medial side.
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We can see the meniscus root.
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We can even see the root attachment right there,
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and it's lining up very nicely with the
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edge of the femur and the tibia.
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There is one of the attachments of the meniscus.
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Let's blow it up a little bit.
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Here's another attachment of the meniscus,
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the so called coronary ligament attachment.
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But on this side,
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we already know that in this relatively young
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person who's had a violent pivot shift,
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that there's a meniscal problem.
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We're missing our triangle.
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So now we have to define the problem.
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And as I'm defining it,
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I recognize that there is another fracture
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in the femoral terminal sulcus,
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again illustrating the violence
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of whatever happened.
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We know that the ACL is going to be gone
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with this constellation of fractures.
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That's not why we're here.
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There's less than a 7% chance the
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ACL could still be intact.
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But I am interested in where did the meniscus go?
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Because this is about meniscus.
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Did it go in? It's like belly buttons.
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Is it an innie or an audi?
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And I can't find it in.
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I can't find a piece that got chopped off
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and went in. I'm looking really hard.
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In fact, I'm looking at that root.
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We have a nice, clean root,
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meniscus and root attachment, but over here,
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not so much.
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where is it? Oh, there's a root injury, all right,
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the root ligament. Chop, chop.
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The relationship of the meniscus to the root.
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Chop, chop.
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We have a root trauma, a root tear,
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but we're not done yet because we
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got to find this other piece.
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We already know that this meniscus in this
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younger person is floating outwards.
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It's not lining up very nicely with the edge of
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the tibby and the femur because it's
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no longer properly anchored.
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So, in a sense,
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this meniscus is separated from the anchors
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that keep it in the proper place.
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And you got to remember,
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this person's lying on their back.
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They're not even weight bearing.
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There are no hoop stresses.
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So imagine what happens to this poor little
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triangulated piece of cartilage when you stand up.
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It's like toothpaste. Boom.
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It goes out even further.
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Let's take a look at the anterior horn.
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Here's the anterior horn body junction.
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There's the anterior horn.
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There is the root attachment.
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That includes a tether to the transverse meniscal
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ligament of Winslow and a tether to this little
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round structure here called the ligamentum
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mucosum. Don't worry about that.
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Let's go backwards. Now we're missing the body.
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Keep going backwards.
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And our posterior horn is way too small.
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So let's look at the sagittal.
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And here's our sagittal.
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Let's work our way in from the body.
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Here's the body of the meniscus all
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the way out to the periphery.
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And the back of the body should be tethered
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to the popliteus tendon. Let's look at it.
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What do we mean by tethered?
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We mean it should be attached.
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There should be an attachment high and low,
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a superior fascicle attachment and an inferior
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fascicle attachment. Let's draw it for you,
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because this is the other part of the story.
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We've already established that the
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media meniscus has those short,
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stubby little attachments that
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go all the way around.
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You can see them a little better in the mid
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coronal plane as the meniscofemoral ligament.
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I'll draw them
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for the medial side.
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We're going to have a meniscofemoral ligament.
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And I showed you the coronary ligament earlier
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in the back. They're really short,
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so we don't see them.
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But now I'm going to get a little
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bit thicker here, not too thick.
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And I'm going to show you what the
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lateral meniscus attachments look like.
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You don't see those as well, coronally,
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but you see them really well sagittally.
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So here's the lateral meniscus,
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and it has an upper fascicle and a lower fascicle,
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and those fascicles are very important tethers.
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If you lose one,
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the meniscus can actually twist on itself,
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and that can be a cause of locking
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just one of these gone.
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If they're both gone,
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then the meniscus can start to displace or float.
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So we should have an upper one.
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We do, although it looks a little lax right there.
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And we should have a lower one that goes straight
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on back and perforates through the
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popliteus tendon. We don't.
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I'm going to race it so you can
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see it a little better,
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and I'm going to blow it up so you
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can see it a little better.
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Let's blow it up.
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So that should go right on through as a straight
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line. Here's the other piece of it right there.
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It's missing in action.
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It's still missing in action.
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In fact, they're both missing in action.
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There should be one going high and one going low.
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To make matters more complicated,
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we have an upper fascicle and a lower fascicle,
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but we also have a group that's on the outside,
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a lateral upper and lower group,
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and a medial, more central upper, and lower group.
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And they look a little bit different as you
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go from the center to the periphery.
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But that will be a story for another day.
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That's kind of getting into master
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level discussion. right now,
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we're in a pretty advanced discussion,
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but not quite master level yet.
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But this patient has a true meniscocapsular
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detachment. We are missing the lower attachment,
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we are missing the upper attachment,
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and we're also in a violent pivot shift situation.
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Let's go over to the medial side and see what
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that capsule looks like for a moment.
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We said that when you have a violent pivot shift,
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you get bleeding in the capsule.
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There it is too thick.
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But it's not a separation.
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On the medial side, it's a sprain.
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It's bleeding. It's an injury.
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But on the lateral side,
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we've got ligaments that have ruptured,
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a meniscus that has displaced outward
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because it's no longer tethered.
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And just to be complete here is the awful
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consequences of this pivot shift.
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The ACl is gone. The PCl is swollen.
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Here is our blood fluid level,
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and the tibia is displaced anteriorly
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relative to the femur,
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both laterally and medially as
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a sign of ACL deficiency,
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so called passive anterior tibial translation.
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So, in summary,
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you've learned about two very important types of
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vertically oriented tears. One not so bad,
7:59
the vertical longitudinal one, that could be bad,
8:02
the radial tear.
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You've learned how to measure length and depth of
8:07
these tears. And you've also learned, to a degree,
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we're not complete yet,
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the meniscocapsular attachments
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and what can happen to them.
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And the sequela when you have a big time rupture,
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the meniscus being displaced and floating out of
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the joint and no longer providing
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the proper support. Thank you.
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Thank
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