Interactive Transcript
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I love this case, because I
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think this is very educational.
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People often call this pathology when it
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isn't, and it is a great way of showing
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or illustrating how you can have bridging
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between the metaphysis and the epiphysis,
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and it can look bad because there's lots of
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brightness, but it actually is a normal finding.
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So let's look at this.
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This is a 14-year-old girl who came
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in with vague knee discomfort or pain.
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And we're looking at, uh, on the left, a
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sagittal fluid-sensitive fat-suppressed sequence
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and on the right, we're looking at a coronal
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fluid-sensitive fat-suppressed sequence. So
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I want to direct your attention. Right, so
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you notice as we go down we look for that
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trilaminar appearance and this is slightly
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older. So we're losing some of that tri
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laminar appearance and I'll show you some
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other sequences that demonstrate that better.
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But we can still appreciate some degree of
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brightness, at least, and some degree of darkness.
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Maybe you don't see the zone of vibrational
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calcification as well, separating those, those
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areas, but remember we said as you grow older,
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the conspicuity of that zone or trilaminar
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appearance gets less and less, but that's okay.
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What we do notice is right here, and this is
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at the lateral aspect of the femoral condyle.
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You can notice that on the right side
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as we see the line here, it really
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is the lateral side and sort of central,
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little, little, little off midline.
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There's an area of increased STIR signal,
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edema, if you will, of brightness that
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extends from this focal area of the physis
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and grows up in a brush-like manner, like
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somebody took a paintbrush and just swept
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up and a little bit and swept down, okay?
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And this is very characteristic of a
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condition called FOPE, F O P E, which
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stands for Focal Periphysial Edema.
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Now, in the past, people
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have called this pathology.
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It's not.
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This is how the physis begins to close.
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When there's closure, like I said
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before, it doesn't happen all at once.
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It happens at focal areas.
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And this is one area, typically central,
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typically in a teenager, uh, happens more
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often in boys, uh, girls than in boys,
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sorry, uh, but it can happen in both sexes.
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And this is what it looks like.
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As you have focal areas of concern.
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Metaphysis meeting epiphysis, there's still
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a little bit of micro movements that occur.
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And since it's anchored at this location,
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if you will, it's going to be a little
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bit of edema, a little bit of tension that
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goes in the metaphysis and the epiphysis.
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The key is not to call this abnormal, because
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this will eventually go away on its own.
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Other areas are formed, they'll grow away,
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and the physis will eventually close.
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To give you a more convincing image, let
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me go over here and bring this one up.
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This is again our gradient
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sequence, and look at this.
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You can actually see that trabecular bone
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extending all the way across our physis.
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Normal physis here, bright area, that's
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the cartilaginous portion, here, bridge,
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and here we have cartilage again.
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And as we look back and we look, you
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know, that's okay, little tongue of
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tissue of cartilage, that's not a problem.
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And you can see over here that it's
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about to form another area of bridge.
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It happens very, very gradually.
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And over here, that looks,
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uh, looks like another tissue.
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In fact, right over here, you can see it.
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So, it hasn't formed enough of a
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bridge to cause edema on either side.
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But it's okay.
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This, in the adolescent, is okay.
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And typically, we see it around the knee.
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So, don't call this a pathology.
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This is focal periphyseal edema, or FOPE.
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