Interactive Transcript
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In the last vignette, we looked
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at a lateral discoid meniscus.
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By the way, a vast, vast, vast majority
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of meniscal abnormalities, like
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the discoid meniscal abnormality,
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happen on the lateral side.
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In fact, if you see a lateral, or if you see a
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discoid meniscus on the medial side, question
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yourself if it's actually a discoid meniscus.
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It can happen.
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I've seen a few cases.
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But the vast majority
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happen on the lateral side.
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That's just a little caveat for you guys.
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So here's another case of a discoid meniscus.
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With a slight variation, and
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let me talk to you about that.
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Here is a sagittal T1.
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Already we can tell that there's something
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wrong with this lateral meniscus.
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It's very, very thick.
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It has abnormal globular signal, but it
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doesn't reach the articular surface, so I
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don't think it's actually torn within the body.
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And it's sort of bunched up over here,
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and there's a big gap between the
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capsule, posteriorly, and, uh, posterior.
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very posterior margin of your lateral meniscus.
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So what's going on?
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So I can already tell you that there's been
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an injury or there's been separation of
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your meniscal capsule ligament posteriorly.
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And this is called the Risberg
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variant of discoid meniscus.
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To get a better idea of its anatomy and what
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it looks like on the axial plane, we revert
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back to our thin slices, which in my case are
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these DES sequences that show this
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fluid gap, and let's reconstruct this image
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through the meniscus and see what it looks like.
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I'm going to go back to one-on-one,
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bring down my sagittal DES,
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triangle, reconstruct, and here we go.
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I'm going to zoom in just so you guys can
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appreciate the abnormality a little better.
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So again, what I'm looking at is,
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let's find lateral and medial.
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It's very easy to do.
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We know the lateral side is here, because
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here's the fibula, and here's our abnormal
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meniscus, which is right over here.
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Let's orient our plane, so it
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goes right through that area.
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Let's raise it up,
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so we know we're right through that plane,
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and here, we're actually
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right through that plane.
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So let's go and zoom back out a
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little bit on this, and then turn it.
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So where is the meniscus, right?
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So it has to be over here.
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Here's the meniscus.
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And why does that meniscus look so funky?
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So let me first show you
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where I think the meniscus is.
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This is the root, the
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anterior root of the meniscus.
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This is part of the anterior horn.
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It takes a funny turn over
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here because it's bunched up.
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It's bunched up.
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This part of the meniscus has been
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shifted anteriorly because there's no
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attachment here to the posterior capsule.
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All this fluid is this fluid gap
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that we're seeing back here, okay?
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That's the fluid gap we're
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seeing right over here.
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So let me, if I can, zoom this up
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a little more and actually draw
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what I think the meniscus is doing.
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Here is the outline of what
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I think the meniscus is.
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Okay, that's what the meniscus looks
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like currently because you are missing
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attachment to the posterior capsule.
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This fluid-filled area is the space
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that has been left by this meniscus
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that has been translocated anteriorly.
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What should that meniscus have looked like?
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So it should have looked like if it
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was just a discoid meniscus, it should
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have looked something like this.
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It would still be a discoid meniscus, right?
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But now you've lost the attachments.
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That's why this portion of your discoid
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meniscus has translocated to this position.
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So this is called a Risberg variant.
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And this is more problematic because every
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time the patient flexes or extends his
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knee, the discoid, this bunched-up part
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of the meniscus keeps moving back and
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forth, back and forth, back and forth.
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So that can cause problems of locking.
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