Interactive Transcript
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Sequences in the axial projection.
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Here, the choices are a little more variable.
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You get to choose.
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But you don't have to go in there and
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talk to your technologist for every case.
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You educate your technologist on what to
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choose based on the historical diagnosis.
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So you may have some flexibility in your
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wrist protocol and pulsing sequences.
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I personally like a short axis T1 and a short axis T2
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if I am not hunting for acute active tendon pathology.
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For instance, if I'm looking for a mass or
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entrapment neuropathy, I'll pick these two sequences.
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The other thing I do in my short axis
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projection is I immediately figure out
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how the technologist positioned the wrist.
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If the ulnar styloid is pointing dorsally,
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that means that the hand is in pronation.
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Whereas if the styloid rolls around towards
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the medial side or more palmarly, that means
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we're in a supinated or neutral position.
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That helps me get my bearings and
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the relationships, tendons, to their
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underlying or overlying bony structures.
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I use this projection to look at the conformity
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and relationship between the ulna and the radius.
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It is also an important projection to look
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at tendons as they course straight at you.
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Now unlike the finger and some other
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parts of the body where I will oblique my
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axials, here I do them straight at you.
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Orthogonally, and I make sure that the technologist
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has positioned the wrist in a neutral position.
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Not ulnar deviated, not radial deviated, although that
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might be a projection we choose a little bit later on.
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Especially for assessment of the
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scapholunate and lunotriquetral ligaments.
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But I want the wrist to be neutral, straight ahead.
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I don't want to see any deviation of the wrist.
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The metacarpals, with the exception of maybe
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the pinky, which often floats off laterally,
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or, sorry, sorry, medially on its own.
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In terms of how far I go, I want to make sure that
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my axials go from at least proximal to the distal
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radial ulnar joint, which, by the way, this one does.
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It goes pretty far back.
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Let's look at it.
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It goes all the way back here.
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Probably didn't need to go quite that far.
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It could have stopped right there.
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And I want to make sure that the
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distal extent of my axials goes past
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the carpo-metacarpal junction.
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And this does so very nicely.
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The short axis view is excellent
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for identification of masses.
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Because you're used to the axial
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projection from your days in CT.
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The axial projection is also invaluable
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if you have the right sequences, namely heavily
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water-weighted sequences, to search for loose bodies.
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And finally, another strength of the short axis
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projection is to look for entrapment neuropathies
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in the median nerve, so-called carpal tunnel
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syndrome, or in this area known as Guillain's
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Canal, where the ulnar nerve, artery, and vein live.
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More on that a little bit later
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on, when we drill into anatomy.
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Remember also that the relationships
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of tendons to the underlying bone varies
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with position, as mentioned earlier.
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And when you are in extreme pronation, the extensor
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carpi ulnaris may perch or sit on this little ridge.
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And that in itself is not abnormal.
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Extremes of pronation and extremes of
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supination may alter, as discussed,
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the relationships of certain tendons
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to the adjacent bones and grooves.
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And one of these is the ECU or extensor carpi ulnaris.
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Most of the time, this is not abnormal.
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