Interactive Transcript
0:00
Okay, this is a young teenager with pain, possible
0:05
osteochondral defect, possible bone injury,
0:08
possible stress fracture, rule out life itself.
0:12
We have a sagittal T1, a T2,
0:17
and a fat-suppressed PD.
0:20
Let's start scrolling, and I'm going to
0:24
focus primarily on the sagittal, which
0:26
which is my favorite foot and ankle projection.
0:29
And I may pull down one or two
0:31
other projections near to the end.
0:34
And I want you to make some medical, emotional,
0:38
and mental decisions about what types of
0:42
bone injuries or abnormalities you would
0:45
consider in a case like this in a juvenile.
0:50
Well, first, I want to point out to you
0:52
these speckled foci of low signal on T1
0:57
that are scattered throughout the foot, many
1:00
of which are not coalescent, like these.
1:04
They're very delicate.
1:06
They look like somebody
1:07
kind of spray painted them.
1:08
Very gently and focally, these little
1:11
dots across the lower extremity.
1:15
That is a very common scenario in
1:16
juveniles, especially under the age
1:18
of 10, which this person is not.
1:21
And it results from increased bone turnover,
1:24
increased bone metabolism, and hyperemia,
1:27
and you will see this in what I call lower
1:29
extremity abusers, of which all juveniles
1:32
under the age of 10, maybe 12, are guilty.
1:37
That in itself may cause some discomfort,
1:40
but usually does not prompt the
1:42
patient to come in for pain.
1:44
And when I say usually, yes, I do have patients
1:46
that come in, and that's the only finding.
1:48
Somebody looks at it and calls
1:50
it a stress fracture, or RSD.
1:53
That is not a usual manifestation of RSD, also
1:58
known as Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type 1.
2:03
So, speckling in itself is not an alarm bell.
2:08
And we do have quite a bit of speckling.
2:11
Now let's skip over the T2 for a moment,
2:13
because it is not a marrow-sensitive sequence.
2:16
It's a modifier.
2:18
It helps you decide on age and severity
2:21
and a few other complementary things.
2:25
And let's go over to our water-weighted image.
2:27
And there are some areas that are
2:29
very coalescent, especially in the
2:31
upper calcaneus, where it's brighter.
2:35
There's some linearity to it.
2:36
Let's blow it up, like right here.
2:40
There's linearity along the posterosuperior
2:43
aspect of the calcaneus with more confluent edema.
2:49
What shall we call this?
2:51
A microtrabecular stress injury.
2:53
Now what would be a flat-out stress fracture?
2:57
It'd be a little thicker, it'd be a little
2:58
better defined, and it would have an appearance
3:01
in the bone that looks something like this.
3:03
Almost like atrial fibrillation.
3:05
I may have to do it a little
3:07
bit bigger for you to see.
3:08
Yeah, there we go.
3:09
And I'm going to show you some
3:10
of these in other vignettes.
3:13
So I'm not quite ready to give him a full,
3:15
flat-out, full-blown stress fracture, but I
3:17
am willing to give him a microtrabecular stress
3:20
injury and other areas that are more confluent
3:24
with lesser degrees of stress phenomena.
3:27
In other words, bone marrow edema.
3:30
Now, do notice that the bone marrow edema
3:34
in these other loci, like the talus and the
3:37
navicular and the cuneiforms, is central.
3:42
And the central teaching point of a case like
3:45
this is that in RSD, Complex Regional Pain
3:50
Syndrome Type 1, the edema is subcortical.
3:55
It's in the wrong place for that diagnosis,
3:58
which you should have at least considered.
4:02
So RSD is not going to be a strong
4:05
choice for us radiographically.
4:09
What are we going to do to explain those areas?
4:13
Overuse phenomenon.
4:15
Likely symptomatic, not just
4:17
speckled, but more coalescent.
4:19
So what should we call those?
4:21
Microtrabecular intramedullary bone injuries.
4:24
I'm calling this one a microtrabecular
4:27
overuse fracture, not a full-blown
4:30
stress fracture, but microtrabecular.
4:32
I'm calling these overuse
4:34
microtrabecular injuries.
4:36
Now because this is a young person,
4:38
because every bone is affected, I'm
4:42
a little concerned about possibly an
4:44
underlying metabolic or genetic disorder.
4:47
And the one genetic disorder that I might
4:49
have in the back of my mind, especially if I
4:52
start to see more real stress fractures evolve
4:55
on subsequent imaging, or as I follow this
4:58
patient, is osteogenesis imperfecta tarda.
5:02
This patient doesn't have it, but
5:04
should absolutely be screened for
5:06
this if this process is necessary.
5:11
Let's keep going, shall we, because one of the
5:13
questions asked by the clinician, is there an OCD?
5:18
Let's answer that question,
5:19
and the answer is, absolutely.
5:22
An osteochondral defect, a defect in the
5:26
talar dome, and that's why, as promised,
5:29
I have to call up another projection.
5:31
Another water-weighted projection, and
5:33
here it is, in the coronal plane, and
5:37
there is an osteochondral defect in the
5:40
supramedial aspect of the talar dome.
5:42
The talus was swelling around it.
5:45
Now just a word about osteochondral defects.
5:47
I'll call up the axial to see
5:48
if we can see it as well here.
5:51
There it is.
5:52
I'm going to blow it up and
5:53
make it a little lighter.
5:55
And I'll be brief with this.
5:58
There's a very important teaching point
6:00
here that's separate and distinct from all
6:02
the other things that are causing edema
6:05
in this patient, this juvenile patient.
6:08
And that is the character
6:09
of the osteochondral defect.
6:12
Yes, you can all look up that
6:14
you can measure the defect.
6:15
You can put a ruler on it.
6:17
You can give it a depth, a length, and a width.
6:20
You should look at whether
6:21
there's any loose bodies.
6:22
You should look at the chondral surface to see
6:25
if it's blistered or swollen or there's a defect.
6:28
There's one other really important teaching point.
6:31
And that's not why I'm showing the
6:33
case, but I'll throw it in here since
6:35
we are on an osteochondral defect.
6:38
And that is, is the defect shouldered?
6:42
What I mean by that is, let's
6:44
take the talar dome right here.
6:46
It's a talar dome.
6:49
If my defect is here and I have some
6:53
decent bone to the side of it, like here.
6:58
That means it's shouldered.
7:00
However, if my defect goes all the way up
7:04
to the free edge, out here, and there's
7:07
no shell of bone covering it, now you
7:10
cannot put a bone plug in here or a
7:12
graft that's gonna stay in and be stable.
7:16
So it's important, you tell the clinician whether
7:19
that OCD, which is right here, there it is, I've
7:22
colored it in, is shouldered or unshouldered.
7:26
In this case, it does go up to the free edge,
7:28
even though I don't have the preferred coronal
7:31
T1-weighted image to show you, because that
7:34
is not the main reason I am showing the case.
7:36
So in summary, we've got a lower extremity
7:40
abuser with some speckled areas of high
7:42
turnover, hypervascularity, increased metabolism
7:47
in the skeleton, which we see a lot as a non
7:51
contentious form of lower extremity overuse.
7:55
We've got a microtrabecular fracture in the
7:58
posterosuperior calcaneus, which should heal
8:03
on its own within about two to three weeks.
8:06
We do not have a full blown stress fracture,
8:09
which you'll see a little bit later on.
8:12
We have areas of marrow edema, so-called medullary
8:16
stress or overuse phenomenon in other bones.
8:19
We should make sure the patient doesn't
8:21
have underlying, uh, metabolic bone disease
8:24
or genetic bone disease like OI, imperfecta
8:28
tarda, and the patient does have a clear-cut
8:33
osteochondral defect with a length, with a
8:36
width, with a depth that is non-shouldered
8:41
and goes all the way out to the free cortical
8:43
surface of the supramedial talar dome.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.