Interactive Transcript
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Let's talk peroneus brevis
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in the sagittal projection.
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When we're up really high in the muscular
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area, we've already said in another vignette
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that the brevis is a little more posterior
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than the longus. It's closely opposed
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to the muscular unit, and it's deeper.
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That is very hard to appreciate
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in the sagittal projection.
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As we go down in the axial projection,
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they will trade spaces or places, and the
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brevis will assume a more anterior position.
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We can appreciate that in the sagittal
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projection, where the brevis is now
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clearly in the inframalleolar position,
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more anterior than the longus.
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It's also not as fat as the longus.
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Now if we scroll a little bit back up, when
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we get right in the retromalleolar segment of
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the peroneus brevis, it's very hard to see.
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And this is where many tears
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begin and propagate from.
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And the reason is, it's pushed up against
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the back of the fibula, and especially if
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you plantar flex the foot, it's even flatter.
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So this segment of the peroneus brevis
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is going to be flat and very hard to
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visualize in the sagittal projection.
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The reason that the sagittal projection still
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maintains a level of importance is because
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when you have big tears that retract all the
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way up, you have to find where the brevis
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is proximally, and nothing does that better
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than the long-axis sagittal projection.
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It does it better than the axial projection.
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As discussed previously, we're going to have a
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muscular segment of the peroneus brevis, then
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a supramalleolar segment, a retromalleolar
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segment, and then an inframalleolar segment.
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And then a peritubercular segment,
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which is very difficult to appreciate
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in the sagittal projection.
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And then finally a preinsertional and
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an insertion on the base of the fifth.
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Let's just for a moment look at the coronal
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projection, which is not particularly
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interesting to most peroneus brevis aficionados.
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But we do have the brevis being a
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little bit higher than the longus.
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And sometimes you can just put your little
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cursor over here to cross-reference where it is.
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There's our brevis.
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There's our brevis.
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And occasionally it's nice to follow it
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right into the tip or the base of the fifth.
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Let's see if we can do that.
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Here's the base of the fifth right here.
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Let's go backwards.
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There's our brevis.
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Really hard to pick out because it gets so tiny
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and attritional looking as it works its way down.
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Now we go backwards.
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It's a little more oval.
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Now we go down.
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It's a little more attritional.
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And there it goes right
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into the base of the fifth.
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Of course, if you've got a Jones or a pseudo
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Jones fracture, you better be looking at
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the peroneus brevis in this projection too.
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