Interactive Transcript
0:00
In the last case, we saw a little divot in the trochlea.
0:04
Here.
0:04
That was an osteochondral lesion.
0:07
Well, here's another case of a little
0:09
divot, but this is a much more serious condition.
0:13
This is a result of avascular necrosis
0:17
to the trochlea, which causes a fishtail deformity of the elbow.
0:22
They call it a fishtail.
0:24
It's because
0:26
both the condyles come down, like so, and like so.
0:30
And I'll draw that for you in a little bit, looking like the tail of a fish.
0:34
What's happening?
0:36
So the history here is very, very important.
0:39
This person, maybe four or five years ago, had a supracondylar fracture.
0:45
Remember we talked about a supracondylar fracture?
0:47
Where does it happen?
0:48
It happens right here where the bone is very, very thin.
0:53
So at one point, this person had a supracondylar fracture.
0:56
It healed up, but then a few years later start having pain.
1:00
He started having pain.
1:01
And when we reimaged them...
1:02
This is an arthrogram.
1:03
This is a T1-weighted sequence with intra articular contrast.
1:08
This is a DESS sequence.
1:09
And that's fluid over here.
1:11
When we did this, we saw this big divot over here.
1:14
And we also saw osteochondral lesions
1:17
involving the radius here, the capitulum over here, and also parts of the trochlea.
1:26
So multifocal areas of osteochondral lesion
1:30
and cystic changes and degeneration, and even a little bit osteophyte formation.
1:35
So these are all sequela of longterm abnormality in that joint because
1:39
of incongruity and avascular necrosis in the lateral trochlea.
1:44
And on the lateral view,
1:46
on the sagittal view, you can see there's even a little bit
1:49
of cartilage fissuring that's happening over here.
1:52
All part of this entire process.
1:54
And it all stemmed from the fact that this person, years ago, had a supracondylar
2:02
fracture, something that's very, very common in kids.
2:05
But not everybody who has this fracture
2:07
goes on to develop this abnormality or this complication.
2:10
It's rare, but it's important enough that a good orthopedic surgeon will say
2:15
to the child's mother or the child, hey, you know what?
2:18
Your elbow is probably going to be fine after the supracondylar fracture,
2:21
but in a few years, if you start having pain for no apparent
2:25
reason, come back and see me, because this could be one of those
2:29
complications that's happening. In the next vignette,
2:32
I'm going to show you why this happens.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.