Interactive Transcript
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We have here an elbow of a
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pediatric patient with elbow pain.
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And one of the most common findings,
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if we do find something abnormal,
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is an osteochondral lesion.
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And the most common location for
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an osteochondral lesion about
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the elbow is the capitellum.
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On the image on your left is a
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coronal dual echo-static state.
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That's our gradient thin slice images.
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The image on your right is a fat
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suppressed fluid-sensitive sequence.
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You could tell that this is a There's
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already something abnormal because
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there's a pretty moderate-sized
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joint effusion that has developed.
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There's lots of edema in the capitellum, and
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there's also irregularity to the surface of your
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capitellum with tiny or small cysts associated.
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So this right here is an osteochondral
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lesion with the lesion that
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extended out into the joint space.
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So this is an unstable lesion.
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It helps us to talk about
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stability versus instability.
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Uh, and it guides the orthopedic
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surgeon to what to do.
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The criteria for an unstable osteochondral
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lesion in the pediatric population is slightly
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different than it is in the adult population.
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That's because the pediatric cartilage or
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lesions such as these are more resilient,
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if you will, than the ones for adults.
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So we are less conservative in what
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we say is, uh, abnormally unstable.
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In the adult population, the
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presence of a single cyst would make
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an osteochondral lesion unstable.
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In the pediatric population, the cyst has
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to be multiple, or if there is a single
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cyst, it has to be more than 5 millimeters.
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Okay?
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So if you have one of those
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two criteria, it's unstable.
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Sometimes people use size, but at
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our institution and in a lot of the
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literature, size is not mentioned.
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Some literature says in the knee,
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maybe a centimeter or centimeter and a half.
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That doesn't naturally translate into other
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joints, but if you see a large lesion, you can
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suggest that maybe the size alone may make it
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unstable, but that's not a proven criterion.
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In the adult population, if you had just
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edema, let me bring up another sequence
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here, maybe a coronal, I'll make sure.
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If you had just edema around
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your area of abnormality, that
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could be construed as unstable.
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In the pediatric population, not only
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does it have to be edema, but there
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has to be clear fluid-like signal
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surrounding the osteochondral lesion.
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This one does not have it.
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However, as I mentioned before, we've already
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reached threshold for unstable osteochondral
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lesion by the fact that there are multiple
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cysts and at least one of those cysts
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is five millimeters or greater, right?
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So this is an unstable osteochondral lesion.
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And of course, if you have a loose
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body, in other words, a piece of the
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osteochondral lesion has fallen out of
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its native location and is floating around
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in the joint, that's of course unstable.
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Your most important job when looking
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at an osteochondral lesion is one,
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letting them know, letting the surgeons
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know if it's stable or unstable and
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two, finding a loose body if it exists.
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Oftentimes the symptoms are
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related to loose bodies more so
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than the actual osteochondral lesion.
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And as I said before, children
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are much more resilient to these
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things healing than adults are.
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So oftentimes periods of rest may
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result in complete healing, while in
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other cases, surgery may be required.
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