Interactive Transcript
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I'd like to talk about some unique situations
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and some kind of a unique, quirky kind of guy.
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The first unique situation, with regard to
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parameters, is the relationship of the radius and
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ulna and how congruent they are to each other.
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Pretend my two fingers on each hand represent
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each hand, and one represents the radius,
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the middle finger, and the shorter finger,
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my index finger, represents the ulna.
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Now, when you pronate or supinate, there should be
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a congruent rotational relationship between the two.
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Sometimes what can happen is the
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ulna can start to float dorsally.
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Now fortunately, it only does it usually on one side.
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So the optimal thing is to scan a patient with either
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CT or MRI in a steep pronated and supinated view.
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And compare how dorsal the ulna is to the
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radius in the short axis axial projection.
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This is an extremely important maneuver because
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it's a common cause of wrist pain, namely radial
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ulnar instability, usually only in one wrist.
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So you're looking for something as simple as symmetry.
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Then I've got another maneuver for you.
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I hardly ever put intra
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articular contrast in the wrist.
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There is no need.
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As we'll see later on, the direct and the
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indirect signs of scapholunate and lunato
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triquetral insufficiency are more than enough.
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Sometimes, you can augment your diagnosis
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without an arthrographic injection by simply
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looking at the wrist in the neutral position.
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And then imaging it coronally in the steep radial,
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sorry, steep ulnar deviation position and steep radial
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deviation position to see if the intrinsic proximal row
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ligaments separate in either radial or ulnar deviation.
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You'll have to call for these views in unique
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situations or train your technologist to
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do so When the situation is appropriate.
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Now let me do a little bit of drawing.
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I want to talk about a controversial
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subject that hand surgeons and radiologists
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go back and forth on quite a bit.
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And that is the concept of variance.
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So I'm going to do my best to draw you an
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ulnar with an ulnar styloid and a radius.
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And here's our radial ulnar articulation.
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There's our scaphoid fossa just to get oriented.
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Now surgeons like to talk about variance on x ray.
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The relationship proximal to
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distal of the ulna to the radius.
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In certain positions, like a clenched fist view
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or steep pronation, the ulna may jut distally.
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and may abut and encroach on the lunate.
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Now we're not using x ray, we're using
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MRI, often in a neutral position, sometimes
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pronated, sometimes supinated, so there's
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a tremendous amount of variability in
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how the technologist positions the wrist.
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In general, I use about 8 millimeters of
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disparity between the marginal edge of the
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ulna and the marginal edge of the radius.
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So if it's short by 8 millimeters, or if
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it's too long by 8 millimeters, I suggest
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that there's ulnar variance posture.
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I put that posture word in there so
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the hand surgeons won't yell at me.
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In other words, I don't want to use their
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term, ulnar variance, which is an x ray term.
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I use the posture adjective to get out of jail free
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and make sure they know that there's a tendency for
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the ulna to be a little too long or a little too short.
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Sometimes, I'll even do a clenched fist view.
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The most valuable aspect of determining
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whether variance posture contributes
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to disease are the secondary signs.
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When the ulna is too short, you'll frequent.
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You'll frequently see swelling over here
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at the peripheral attachments of the TFCC.
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If the ulna is too long, positive variance
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posture, it'll abut against the lunate.
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And it'll produce erosions in the lunate,
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and you'll also see some adjacent areas of
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chondromalacia around the lunate and around the ulna.
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So you'll see some chondromalacia right there,
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and you'll see some chondromalacia right there.
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You may have a little bit of fluid, a little bit of
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swelling, and it's these indirect signs that tell
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you when posture is really relevant to the diagnosis.
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My final, unique, quirky point.
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Contrast.
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I rarely, to uncommonly, use contrast in the wrist.
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If I have some weird looking mass that I can't
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characterize, in other words, looks like a
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ganglion, smells like a ganglion, feels like
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a ganglion, but it's in a funny spot with
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some features of atypicality, it's funny.
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I'm going to inject it, but if it's in
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the typical position along the scapho
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lunate capsule with the proper signal and
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smooth and round, I'm not injecting it.
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Finally, arthrographic injection.
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I use arthrographic injection almost every day.
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0 percent of the time to diagnose
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scapho lunate ligament injuries.
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I'll use it about 10 20 percent of the time to diagnose
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lunato triquetral ligament injuries since this ligament
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is smaller and sometimes more difficult to identify.
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But that is really an exception.
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So I don't commonly give injections, IV
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for masses, and I don't commonly inject.
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Intra articulately, with an arthrogram,
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for the wrist, unless I'm forced to.
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My next point gets its own discussion.
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Proper angles for assessment of the scaphoid bone.
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