Interactive Transcript
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This is a 67-year-old male with a painful lump
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medially, so I'm looking for medial abnormalities.
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I've got my neurovascular bundle,
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the tibialis posterior, the flexor digitorum and hallucis,
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Tom, Dick, and Harry, three tendons.
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I've got two tendons over here, peroneus longus and brevis.
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I've got one tendon in the back, the achilles.
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And I've got four in the front
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that'll go unnamed for now.
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So, one, two, three, and four.
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I'm focusing medially, where there's a lot
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going on in the region of the deltoids.
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Although, I don't get that excited about the
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deltoid other than the spring ligament and
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tibiospring ligament, which are thickened over
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here, and the deltoid is usually not a structure
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that requires a lot of surgical attention.
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So, I'm going to focus on the tibialis
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posterior tendon, which is secured by the
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laciniate ligament or medial retinaculum.
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And normally, when it tears, and I'm
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going to do my search pattern from bottom
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to top, I prefer the toe be pointed.
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And that the axials be obliqued perpendicular to
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the orientation of the tendon, much like this.
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But they didn't give me that, so this was not
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performed properly for a tendon evaluation.
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But it's no matter.
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I've been doing this a long time.
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I can deal with it.
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And I'm going to follow my tendon down, knowing
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that this tendon, when it tears, gets big.
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Whereas the peroneus brevis,
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when it tears, it gets thinner or small.
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And we do have an abnormality of
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the peroneus brevis right here.
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But let's stay on the medial side because that
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currently is not symptomatic in this patient.
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You're seeing the brevis split into
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two parts here in front of the longus.
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So let's stay with the posterior tibial tendon,
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which when torn, results in collapse of the foot,
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pressure on the spring ligament, insufficiency
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of the spring ligament, and a painful flat foot.
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Tears of this tendon may be exacerbated
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by very stiff low cut shoes, and it
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almost never tears right at the insertion.
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It's usually retro and immediately inframalleolar.
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Now there are some conditions
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that predispose to this tear.
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One of which is a curious, very deep groove
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with large spurs on either side in the tibia.
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There's a small groove here with a
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small spur, and the tendon looks fine.
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But when that groove gets really deep, and the
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spurs get really big, they tear right there.
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The second place you have to pay very careful
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attention to the posterior tibial tendon is right
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behind the malleolus, immediately behind it.
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Because it likes to tear there, especially
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if there are spurs coming off in this locus.
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Here, not so much.
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It looks pretty smooth and concave forward.
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So as we go down, we are not seeing a tear.
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The tendon becomes more elliptical as we go down.
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It's a little flatter.
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And we're headed for the navicular.
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And when we head for the
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navicular, the tendon is gonna fan.
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It normally fans because of so many attachments.
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So I'm not that bothered by the fanning, except
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for the fact that I've been doing this such a
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long time, that I'm seeing it fan prematurely.
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I'm losing the signal a little early.
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I don't really like to lose the signal
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until the talus has disappeared.
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And I'm already losing the signal
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and the talus is still present.
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So I'm gonna have to resort to another projection.
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And that is the Sagittal PD Fat Suppression.
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Now remember we said this tendon
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hardly ever tears at the insertion.
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But this one did.
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Right there.
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All the way up to its insertion on the navicular.
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Now it is said that that tear
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will occur in patients that have
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very irregular shaped naviculars.
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Which this patient does.
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Let's blow it up.
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It is said that that tear will
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occur in Ost Naviculary Syndrome.
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where you have an accessory navicular, something
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like this, with a chondral interface between
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that navicular and the bone right here, and
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that's known as a type 2 accessory navicular.
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An ostibial externum, where you have a
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tendon and an ossicle inside it, not so much.
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And a cornuate navicular, where this
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ossicle fuses and makes for a big
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navicular, that's at higher risk.
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But not so much.
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So this patient has an irregular, ragged,
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spurred navicular, and has developed
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the very unusual distal, let's scroll
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it, distal posterior tibial tendon tear.
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It ends right about there,
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goes right up to the navicular.
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It's most atypical.
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And I've given you the other sites of
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potential tear and weakness, right behind
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the malleolus, and up in the tibia, where
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you have a very subtle indentation or groove,
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I'm not going to go through the entire search
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pattern, in this case, although I've given
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you several very important checklist dictation
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related things to put into your dictation
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as pertinent negatives or positives when
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you have a posterior tibial tendon injury.
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And one of them should include length.
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And here we get the length
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in the sagittal projection.
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