Interactive Transcript
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Let's tackle the easiest tendon
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in the foot, the achilles.
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It's the largest, it's the longest,
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10 to 15 centimeters in length.
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And it's made up of the confluence
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of the soleus and the gastrocnemius.
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It's surrounded by a fibrous
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sheath known as paratenon.
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There's no synovium around it, so
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there's no true tenosynovial sheath.
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And the anteroposterior dimension
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is usually about 7 to 8 millimeters.
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The achilles tends to be a
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little bit convex posteriorly.
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It shouldn't be semilunar or convex anteriorly.
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In other words, the achilles
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shouldn't have a shape like this.
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And the achilles usually travels with a
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small tendinous unit, anteromedial to it 90
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percent of the time, called the plantaris
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tendon, which is sometimes used for, um,
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Now let's talk a little bit about the
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relationship of the soleus and the gastrocnemius.
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Let me, uh, do a little drawing here.
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So here's the gastrocnemius.
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We'll make the soleus in blue.
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And that would be one half of the achilles.
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And then the other half is
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gonna look similar to that.
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You've got these two muscles
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that are traveling together.
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Forming two bundles.
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So we would have basically a duplication of this
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for the second bundle, so let's draw it again.
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We would have the soleus in blue,
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and then we'd have the gastrocnemius
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in yellow on the other side.
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And then these two would come
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together to form one unit.
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Now, I don't really care so much about
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this medial-lateral relationship, because
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as you go down, these things are gonna
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kind of twist and spiral around one another.
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So, memorizing that, not really critical.
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What is more important for you to
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memorize is the relationship of the soleus
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as we go from proximal to distal.
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So let's start up high.
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We've got muscles.
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We've got an intratendinous achilles.
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Sorry, an intramuscular achilles.
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And then on the T1 we see
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the myotendinous junction.
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And right after that, about 5
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centimeters above the superior calcaneal
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protuberance, is the watershed area.
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In the watershed area, you've got hypovascularity,
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this is where a lot of ruptures will occur.
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Then we've got the belly of the tendinous
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component, a small recess, which sometimes
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has a little bit of fluid in it, not
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to be confused with a slit-like tear.
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This is normal, about one to two
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millimeters of fluid may sit in the
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retrocalcaneal space, in this little recess
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between the achilles and the calcaneus.
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Then as we get a little further
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down, we start to see the achilles
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tightly attached to the calcaneus.
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And this is its footprint, the upper,
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deeper portion of the footprint.
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I'm going to draw on it right now.
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And I'm going to use the color blue. Upper and
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deeper in here going to be mostly made up of
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soleal fibers, the more inferior and superficial
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component here is made up of gastroc fibers.
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And sometimes these will actually separate.
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So you might have fibers that are preserved
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deeply, that attach over here, and fibers
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that come off over here and retract all
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the way up, and leave a little preserved
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area of soleal fibers in the front of it.
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Or separate the soleal fibers from the
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gastroc fibers and this is a type of
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delamination separation type of tear.
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And that's the reason why it's important to
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understand this sort of layering effect that
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you get as you go a little bit more inferior.
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Just one other side note, and that is when
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you're looking at the achilles, you should
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always pay careful attention to the shape and
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configuration of the posterior superior calcaneus.
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But this is where the pump bump or Haglund
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deformity will form, and it's usually seen most
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prominently in the posterosuperomedial calcaneus,
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often associated with high heel wearers.
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That includes our introductory
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discussion of the achilles.
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