Interactive Transcript
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So now we are on an MRI image.
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This is a fluid-sensitive
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fat-suppressed sequence.
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Now, whether it's a T2 fat sat or STIR, that
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doesn't make a big difference, but I think
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if you just describe it as a fluid-sensitive
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fat-suppressed sequence, you sort of avoid
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the issue of having to call it STIR or T2.
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So if you're, for the trainees out there,
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if you look, somebody's asking you a
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question, and you don't know what it is,
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just say that.
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A fluid-sensitive fat-suppressed sequence.
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So we're going to take this image
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now, and I am going to show you
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what the different layers look like.
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So we noticed before on the video,
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we talked about the five-seal component.
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So what is the five-seal component?
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It is,
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we're going to concentrate on this area
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right here, particularly this one right here.
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Okay?
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So if you notice, there is a tri-laminar
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appearance, three layers, tri-laminar.
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You've got bright, you've got
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dark, and you have bright.
1:00
Okay, and we know this is the epiphyseal side.
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We know this is the metaphyseal side.
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Similarly, over here in the proximal tibia also.
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But I'm going to concentrate on the
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femur just because it's easier to
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draw, and that's a bigger structure.
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We said that on the epiphyseal
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side, this bright structure is what?
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That is where you have your
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big cartilaginous cells, right?
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They're hypertrophied.
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The cells have a lot of water.
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That's unbound, that's why it looks bright,
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because it has a lot of water content.
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The dark area, this, why is that dark?
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That's the zone of provisional calcification.
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Matrix is being laid down, calcification
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is happening, and calcification, an MRI, no
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matter what sequence you're looking at, it's
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going to be dark, like you see over here.
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Finally, you've got this bright
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structure here on the metaphyseal side.
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That's where all the blood vessels
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are coming in, and they're releasing.
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The humeral factors into this area, so
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that's because the humeral factors, the
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blood vessels in that area have to be leaky.
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The capillaries, and they have lots
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of fluid, again, because you have
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so much fluid that's unbound to
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macromolecules, that appears bright.
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So whenever you look at the physis
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in a pediatric patient, always look
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for that trilaminar appearance.
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If you don't see that trilaminar appearance,
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where there's a disruption, then that means
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that there's something wrong with the physis.
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Um, maybe there is an old infection, maybe
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there is prior trauma, but something has
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disrupted that zone that's not normal.
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If you look very carefully, I'm going
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to erase a couple of these things,
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you can see something similar
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but maybe not to the same extent
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in the secondary ossification center over here.
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Look at the periphery.
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You can see some of the brightness.
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You can see the darkness; it's a little
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harder to appreciate, but something similar
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is actually happening in the epiphysis.
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Because you also have an area of cartilage
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that's now getting ossified, but this
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is happening in a spherical fashion.
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Instead of happening in the longitudinal
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fashion that you see in the metaphysis,
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you have it here in a spherical fashion,
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going from inside to outside,
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where cartilage in the center is
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becoming bone and expanding peripherally.
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So both these processes are known
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as endochondral ossification.
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Endochondral means that inside the cartilage,
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inside the cartilage, it's being ossified.
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