Interactive Transcript
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The wrist, anatomy, MR, the short axis view,
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and the proximal aspect of the axial projection in the
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region of the radial ulnar joint is our focus today.
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I'm going to approach this not simply by naming
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structures, which you can get out of a textbook.
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I'm going to give you the practical
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approach to analyzing these structures,
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and I begin by with a distal radial ulnar
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articulation which is often overlooked.
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Examine the congruence or the relationship anterior
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to posterior between the ulna and the radius.
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Now that may vary depending upon whether
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the patient is in pronation or supination.
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If the patient is in pronation, you're going to see
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If the patient is in supination, the groove will rotate
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down, and if the patient is in the neutral position
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with the thumb up, then it'll be somewhere in between.
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That will affect the relationship between
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the radius and ulna, but there will be times.
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When you have to examine both wrists to see
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whether one ulna floats in a dorsal position
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in extremes of supination or pronation,
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suggesting radial ulnar instability.
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So a comparison between the two sides and the short
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axis view on MR or even CT is not out of the question.
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Some other basic structures.
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We've got a group of muscles that
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consist of, as you might expect, flexors.
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We'll discuss them individually a little bit later on.
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We've also got a fatty space here,
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which is a pathway of spread for various
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inflammatory processes called Parona's space.
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And we've got the Pronator Quadratus, which
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is involved in pronation, a pretty big muscle.
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When we look at the radioulnar articulation,
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it not only consists of two bones, but within it.
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It is a capsule, some synovium, and some cartilage.
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Then on the dorsal surface, we've got a group
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of six compartments, which we will subsequently
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name for you, but not right this minute.
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They're involved in, as you might expect, extension.
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But let's take a few simple, bony landmarks.
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For instance, Lister's tubercle.
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This is a wonderful landmark to
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isolate the extensor pollicis.
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Brevis, which may be affected in crossover
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syndrome, to be discussed a little bit later
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on, but it's one of the hardest extensors
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to identify because of its oblique course.
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So, find Lister's tubercle, go one over to the ulnar
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side, and you have found the extensor pollicis brevis.
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Another variation that you might
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encounter in the short axis view, is the
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position of the extensor carpi ulnaris.
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Now it's secured by this superficial retinaculum,
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but underneath it, and not particularly well
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seen in these short axis views, and I'll scroll
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a little bit for you, you can see it right
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there, is the extensor carpi ulnaris subsheath.
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Here's part of the subsheath right here.
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That helps attach the ECU, or extensor carpi
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ulnaris, to the rest of the TFCC, as you can see,
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via the subsheath, the area of the
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meniscus homologue, and the capsule.
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More on that in further detail in another vignette.
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Introduction to the short axis projection.
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