Interactive Transcript
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The wrist, short axis, focus on tendons,
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mostly proximal, although the anatomy is
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consistent as you move from proximal to distal.
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A few important bony landmarks, the groove of
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the extensor carpi ulnaris and Lister's tubercle.
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Let's play.
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The first group to come in, extensor group
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number one, known as the abductor brevis.
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Notice longus brevis.
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There'll be a theme.
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Longus brevis, longus brevis,
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longus, makes it easy to memorize.
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These two are responsible for pain at the base of
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the thumb in adults, which every adult has.
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Everybody's got arthritis at the base of the thumb.
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Everybody has some degree of
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inflammation of this thumb.
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First compartment, which is known as De Quervain's
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disease, or stenosing fibrotic tenosynovitis.
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These tendons are unique because they have
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innumerable slips drawn in by these little dots.
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And when these tendons are inflamed, for they rarely,
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uncommonly, rupture, then the slips may be highlighted.
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And may incorrectly be diagnosed
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as multiple longitudinal tears.
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This is a terrible mistake.
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Then we get into our next group.
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Again, longus and brevis.
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Extensor carpi radialis longus and brevis.
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And these are uncommonly injured, but not
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uncommonly involved in some peritendinitis.
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Extensor, compartment number two.
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Then compartment number three.
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Just medial to Lister's tubercle.
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This one has a very oblique course.
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Making tracking it a little bit challenging.
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Find Lister's tubercle, find the EPL, and
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then go distal and proximal from this point.
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The extensor pollicis longus, its muscle
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and tendon may be implemented, or implicated
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actually, in conditions where the extensor
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retinaculum is thickened, inflamed, or scarred,
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and presses it against other structures,
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known as the crossover syndrome.
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Then we get into the group known as the extensor
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digitorum communis and indices to the index finger.
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Sometimes you'll get tears in this
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region, and it's difficult to sort out
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which or all of the tendons are involved.
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Extensor compartment number four.
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Then the little teeny weeny itty bitty compartment,
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the extensor digiti minimi, compartment number five.
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And finally, in young people, the most important
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compartment, the extensor carpi ulnaris, which
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sits in the ulnar groove some of the time,
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but in extremes of supination and pronation,
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even in the normal individual, it may perch
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on top of the protrusion of the ulnar bone,
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and therefore look like it's subluxing or dislocating.
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The tip-off that this is simply a positional
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phenomenon due to extremes of rotation
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is the fact that nothing is swollen.
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There's no high signal intensity present.
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So anytime it looks malpositioned, without
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the accouterments of inflammatory reaction,
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it's probably a normal positional variation.
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