Interactive Transcript
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I'd like to scroll the sagittal projection
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and have you focus for a moment on the
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relationship of the lunate to the capitate and
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the radius and talk not so much about rotation.
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In other words, ventral or palmar facing
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lunate, thissy, or dorsal facing lunate, so
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called dissy, but rather the position of the
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lunate relative to these other structures.
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Now they should line up so that the metacarpal, which
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you see right here, the metacarpal, and the capitate,
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and the lunate, and the radius should all be collinear.
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In other words, they should line up in a straight line.
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Now what happens when they're not collinear?
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When they're not collinear, there's instability.
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We've already talked about rotation.
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But in perilunate and lunate dislocations, unlike this
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situation, which is a different type of instability,
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more chronic, the lunate not only will rotate,
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but it'll spit out towards the palm or surface.
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So the lunate is more dorsally positioned.
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It's not collinear, but it's in
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the dorsal aspect of the line.
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Whereas in patients with perilunate and lunate
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dislocations, the lunate will be ventral facing,
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but it'll also be spit this way, towards the east
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coast, towards the palmar aspect of the wrist.
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Let's have a look on a diagram
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which makes it pretty simple.
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We have linearity on this normal image between the
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third metacarpal, the capitate, and the lunate.
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I'm not a very good drawer.
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In a perilunate dislocation, the
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lunate and the radius remain collinear.
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The capitate sits posterior, but
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this relationship is maintained.
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The lunate may or may not be ventral facing.
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In this case, maybe just a hair.
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In a midcarpal subluxation or dislocation, the
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capitate is back a bit, but the lunate, which is
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now facing the palmar surface, ventral facing
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lunate, is also displaced ventrally, or palmarly,
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unlike our clinical case, which we showed on MRI,
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where the lunate was more dorsally positioned.
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This is a midcarpal dislocation.
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And then finally, in a true lunate dislocation,
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the lunate is now not only ventral facing, but it's
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also dislocated or spit out into the palmar space.
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So these are four important variations.
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Normal collinearity, perilunate dislocation,
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lunate collinear with a radius, maybe a little
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tilted, capitate back, midcarpal dislocation,
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lunate is subluxed, capitate back, ventral facing,
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true lunate dislocation, lunate subluxed and
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dislocated, palmarly, ventral facing, capitate,
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not displaced, now collinear with the radius.
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That concludes our discussion of carpal instability.
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