Interactive Transcript
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You're looking at a six-year-old who
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presents with foot pain and some stiffness.
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And you're looking at a T1-weighted
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image on the far left, fat-weighted.
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A proton density image in the center,
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not fat suppressed.
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Looks like a T1-weighted image, but isn't.
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And on the far right, a conventional T2,
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fast spin echo, without fat suppression.
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The patient was actually sent in
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rule out or exclude osteoid osteoma
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because the bone scintigraphy was
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markedly positive in a focal area.
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They didn't give us the bone scintigraphy and
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I'm not going to give it to you because many
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times you're going to be looking at the MR
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alone and my goal is to get you trained in MRI.
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So let's scroll and an osteoid osteoma will
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typically show up as a round nidus and the nidus
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is typically not liquefied.
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So, in other words, if you do a T2, like the one
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on the right, it should never be white like fluid.
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If it's white like fluid, you better
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be worried about a Brodie's abscess.
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Then you may see a rim of sclerosis around it,
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with the nidus in the center, which is not fluid
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like, and that sclerotic rim will be dark, and
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then, in some cases, depending upon where the
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OO or osteoid osteoma is located, you may see
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massive amounts of edema or very little edema.
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Typically, when you're medullary,
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you're going to see more edema.
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When you're juxtacortical, you may
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see less, little, or even no edema.
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So, as we scroll through looking for
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something with that pattern, we don't see it.
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Now, it would have been absolutely
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lovely to have a heavily fat suppressed,
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water-weighted sequence like this one.
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And we have it.
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And we scroll it.
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And we do not see such a
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hyperintense edematous nidus.
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Although, we do see a little bit
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of higher signal right there.
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That's a little bit round.
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And some of you might say, seeing that
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image alone, well, maybe there is.
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But we're not done yet.
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So let's take that away and
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bring back our sagittal T2.
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And keep scrolling.
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Now, where was that spot?
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If I cross-reference, which I won't do now, in the
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interest of time, to that spot, it's right here.
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And we've got ourselves a
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talocalcaneal fibrocartilaginous coalition.
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Now, unlike the standard joint, this particular
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joint has a look that's a bit more serrated.
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Whereas our standard joint
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would be nice and smooth.
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And we would see a thin, smooth,
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homogeneous cartilage line.
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We don't.
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We see the serrated appearance.
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It also sticks out a little too far.
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We're coming out of the talus, yet we
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still see this prominent, jutting into
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the screen, jutting medially, middle
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facet with a cartilaginous interface.
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Now, yes, it could have been a bony bar.
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It could have been a bone connection
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between the talus and the calcaneus.
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But it's not.
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This is one of the two most
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common types of coalitions.
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The other type that is common would be
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a coalition between the anterior process
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of the calcaneus and the navicular, the
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so-called calcaneonavicular coalition.
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We certainly don't have that.
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And we have seen other coalitions, including
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coalitions between the calcaneus and the cuboid.
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And very, very rarely will you see
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a coalition between the talus and
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the navicular in the anterior facet.
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So what are the symptoms of coalition?
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We already said the child had pain and spasm.
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So that should tip you off.
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Children with flat feet, that
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should also potentially, uh, tip
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you off to the, to the diagnosis.
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And individuals that have a stiff foot
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with decreased range of motion should
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tip you off to the potential diagnosis.
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So what's the treatment?
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Well, if it's a bony coalition, then one
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option is to try and release that coalition.
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There are also spacers that are placed
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between the talus and the calcaneus to try and
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produce an arch, a fake arch or a false arch.
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In my personal experience, these spacers
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have not stayed anchored for long
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periods of time, and so this is not one
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of my favorite methods of treatment.
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On the other hand, sometimes when you have a
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fibrocartilaginous coalition where you have
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too much movement between this arthritic
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irregular pseudoarticulation or fake or false
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articulation, you may actually, to improve
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the patient's pain, but not necessarily
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their functionality and range of motion,
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fuse that locus.
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Now in the coronal projection, I
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find this extremely helpful because
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I see the, the facet jutting out.
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And we do see it here, but not as
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well as I'd like because guess what?
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When you look in the side view, look
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at where they produce their coronal.
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That's as far back as they went.
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They didn't go back far enough to see
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the actual body of the coalition because
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they were not expecting the diagnosis.
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Had we gone further back, this area
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right here would start to jut further
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and further and further medially.
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And that would help you reaffirm your diagnosis.
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The axial projection, whoops, let's pull it down.
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The axial projection with a PD fat suppression
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and a T2, does show a little bit of that
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jutting out phenomenon right here, right there.
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And it also shows a little bit of inflammation
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right at the site of the coalition.
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This erosion as part of the inflammation
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masquerading, you can see the erosion
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right here, masquerading potentially as
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a round structure and the diagnosis of
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osteoid osteoma, which was not present.
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This is a talocalcaneal fibrocartilaginous
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coalition in a six year old.
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