Interactive Transcript
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We're talking about the extensor digitorum longus
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and extensor compartment on MRI.
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Some pitfalls you should be aware of.
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First, an easy one.
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Here are two oblique components
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of the extensor retinaculum.
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Look at how this one sidles right up to the
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medial free edge of the extensor digitorum.
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It creates a somewhat fuzzy appearance
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to it, which shouldn't be confused with
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fraying or an injury, or an abnormality.
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Another really important pitfall
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you ought to be familiar with, is the sinus
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tarsi, or subtalar space, has this inferolateral
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retinaculum, also called the stem ligament.
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And there's a stem ligament bursa,
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and a capsule associated with that bursa.
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So you can get a bursal cyst,
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or a ganglion pseudocyst.
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It'll come right out of here, and dissect into the
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individual tendon leaflets, or between the tendons
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of the extensor digitorum, and kind of weave its
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way around inside the tendons after they split.
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So when they split down lower, you may have
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a white object weaving in and out of these,
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thinking you're dealing with tenosynovitis,
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when actually you're dealing with a
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single mass that came out of here,
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either a bursal cyst or a ganglion pseudocyst.
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One last pitfall.
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As you follow the extensor digitorum from
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up high, and I've done this before,
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I've often confused the halluses as the medial
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free edge of the extensor digitorum.
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So as we come down, we see the halluses separate.
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That's the digitorum.
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And then as we come down,
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the digitorum's pretty flat.
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And then all of a sudden,
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it'll get a little bulbous.
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Right before it decides to split.
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Do not confuse this bulbous,
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sort of grayish appearance of the
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extensor digitorum with tendinosis.
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This is a normal physiologic bundling of
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the tendon before it splits into its four
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individual rootlets that will come to insert
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on the extensor components of the digits.
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Those are the pitfalls for the EDL.
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Here's a plantar flexed, uh,
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group of images of the foot.
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PD spur T2 and T1 highlighting.
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Delicate structures, namely the
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extensor retinacular mechanism in the
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extensor compartment of the foot on MR.
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So we're up pretty high.
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tibia.
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Let's look at our friends Tom, Dick, and Harry.
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Tibialis anterior, extensor halluces,
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actually Tom, Harry, and Dick.
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Extensor halluces for Harry, and Dick,
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the extensor digitorum longus, which
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travels with the peroneus tertius,
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which hasn't gotten a lot of attention.
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play on our vignettes, yet.
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By the way, deep to those sits the
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neurovascular bundle, and right there, and
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there, is going to be the deep peroneal nerve.
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But that will be a story for another day.
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So, let's focus on the retinaculum.
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And, right about here, we see the
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extensor retinaculum, and there's often
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a separate little loop above the ankle
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joint that surrounds the tibialis anterior
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to help secure it a little bit further.
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And that loop, or separation, or split,
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is Now let's talk for a moment about
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the inferior extensor retinaculum.
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So the inferior extensor retinaculum
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is below the ankle joint.
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As stated, the superior one, which is more
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simple, and may form its own loop around
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the tibialis anterior, is the superior one.
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So here's the superior retinaculum.
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You kind of lose it for a little bit.
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And then as you get down
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here, it kind of makes an X.
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There's a deep oblique component of it, and
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there's a more superficial component of it.
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And there is an oblique supramedial, an
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oblique inframedial, and a variable oblique
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supralateral limb below the ankle joint.
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Here's one of the oblique limbs back here.
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So, not of critical importance to you right now.
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What I'd like to do is turn
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our attention to the stem.
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So the stem, specifically the medial root
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of the inferior retinaculum, helps support,
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in somewhat of a sling-like fashion, to The
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tertius complex, which is right here and here.
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So there's the stem, stem, and stem.
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And here is the superficial retinaculum.
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So superficial portion of the
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sling, deep portion of the sling.
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And these can continue on around for a
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variable distance and provide support to
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the other extensor compartment tendons.
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