Interactive Transcript
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Dr. Stern, this is a 60 something year old, uh,
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3 00:00:03,620 --> 00:00:06,890 female with wrist pain and a supposed mass.
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I think the mass they're feeling is
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probably the ulna, as we'll see in a minute.
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Here's the coronal T1, the gradient echo.
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She wasn't that cooperative.
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And the coronal fat-suppressed proton
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density water-sensitive sequence.
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So in searching for the triangular
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fibrocartilage, it's this tiny little slit.
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It's severely degenerated.
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The peripheral attachments you can see
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barely as these little lines into the fovea.
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The styloidal attachments are a little irregular.
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There's some peripheral synovitis,
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but overall it looks like a mess.
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And, uh, the patient has swelling of the distal
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radial ulnar joint, a degenerated abnormal
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LT ligament with widening of the LT interval.
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Should look more like this with a little slit.
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This little T shape on the distal end.
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And sometimes you'll see a little
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T shape on the proximal end.
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None of these findings are present in the LT.
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So there's an LT problem.
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And then when we go to the short axis view, uh, you
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can see the alignment of the proximal carpal row.
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The arc is interrupted.
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Things are just disorganized.
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And then the radial ulnar articulation.
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The ulna is displaced dorsally.
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And I think that's real.
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Here's the triangular shape
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of the triangular fibrocartilage.
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And this dark structure right here
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is the volar radial nerve ligament.
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So what do you do with a case that's this messy?
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Is there anything to do short of fusing it?
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This is a very difficult case.
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The critical thing, some of the critical
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things would be getting a good history.
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The question is whether or not this is
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a degenerative process or whether it's a traumatic
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process or trauma on a degenerative process.
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The TFC is in bad enough shape
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that it's permitted dorsal translation
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of the ulna on the sigmoid notch of the radius.
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As Dr.
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Pomerantz mentioned, there's fluid
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in the distal radial ulnar joint, and actually
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there may be some splay, increased distance
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between the head of the ulna and the
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sigmoid notch of the radius.
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A lot, you would really need to do
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a good clinical examination and find out
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exactly why this lady was having pain.
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I think it would be a big deal
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to reconstruct the ligaments in someone this age.
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And one might go to more of a salvage procedure.
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The one interesting thing, and I
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appreciate your comments, Steve, would be
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there's no evidence, there's no evidence
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that I can see of ulnar impaction here
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and with the TFC blown out and their...
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I would have thought that maybe there would
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have been some cystic changes in the proximal
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ulnar aspect of the triquetrum, or in the
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perhaps in the ulnar aspect of the lunate.
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We don't see that.
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Actually, there are
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some erosions right here.
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Oh, there we go.
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Okay.
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So there are some erosions present.
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So there probably is a component of abutment.
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Nothing in the triquetrum, however.
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Yeah.
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Just in summary, from a clinical
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standpoint, the question is, A, is she
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symptomatic enough to have anything done?
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Or do you treat her with immobilization,
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anti-inflammatory medicine,
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maybe a corticosteroid injection?
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Or does she have surgery?
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And if she has surgery, the issue is whether or
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not you reconstruct the triangular fibrocartilage
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complex,
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try to keep the ulnar head seated in
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the sigmoid notch of the radius, or
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you do some type of salvage procedure.
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I think there's some in the country
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that would even put an implant in.
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Probably I would.
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Probably not.
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A Dara procedure.
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A number of different things could be done.
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Question for you if you did an arthrogram.
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'Cause some people are gonna recommend arthrography
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and if you did an arthrogram and you had
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rapid extravasation through the LT ligament.
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into the mid-carpal space, or if you did some dynamic
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evaluation and you saw that this was grossly unstable,
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would that affect how you managed this patient?
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Uh, very minimally.
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I think the LT relationship, as you pointed
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out, I think it's abnormal but not grossly abnormal.
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The only other thing that I think is critical
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to realize from the radiologist's
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standpoint is, as we get older, the TFC deteriorates.
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So, there are frequently small fenestrations
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in the TFC that are clinically irrelevant.
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They're acquired over time and still there
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do not need to be treated.
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And then there are cases like this
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where the TFC is completely blown out.
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So as we get older, say 6th, 7th, 8th decade,
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well over 50 percent of people on MRI or MR, if
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you do arthrography, will have fenestrations
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or tears which are clinically not very significant.
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And you make a great point because inexperienced
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people that haven't done a lot of wrist imaging,
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they latch onto these fenestrations and then the
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patient gets a procedure or arthroscopy for something
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that's incidental and unrelated to their symptoms.
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One thing that MRI, coupled with an experienced reader,
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is very good at is telling acute from chronic and also
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telling whether something is actively inflamed or not.
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MRI is really great at picking up inflammation.
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Uh, this patient has some marked synovial hypertrophy.
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This is a big synovial blob, if you will, right here.
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One last question on this case
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and then we'll get off it.
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In the short axis projection, there's quite
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a bit of dorsal positioning of the ulna.
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And as you know, we do for you
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and for others a lot of supination,
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pronation views, comparing the two sides.
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If this was grossly asymmetric from the
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other side, and she's symptomatic from it, is
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there anything you would or can do for that?
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Uh, it's tough.
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I mean, the TFC is blown out.
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There are many things that provide
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congruency to the dysradiated ulnar joint.
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It's a sloppy joint, but the C-shaped contour of
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the sigmoid notch somewhat holds in the ulnar head.
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The ECU, depending on position, is more of a
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dorsal structure and pushes the ulnar head down.
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Uh, you can't quite see it in this view, but the
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pronator quadratus, which goes from the
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radius to the ulna, if you go more approximately,
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that also helps stabilize the ulnar head.
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And then there are interosseous ligaments,
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there's a distal radio-ulnar interosseous ligament.
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I'm not talking about the TFC radio-dorsal and volar
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ligaments, which also help stabilize.
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And there are a number of reconstructive procedures
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to stabilize the distal radio-ulnar joint.
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And I think the reason there's so many
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of them is none of them reliably work.
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The ultimate salvage, and I can't say this
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with 100 percent certainty, is probably an
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implant, the most common of which is the so
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called Scheker implant, which is a semi
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constrained radio-ulnar implant, which
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would solve the problem, but there are a lot
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of problems with implant arthroplasty in the wrist.
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Well, I vote we Scheker this case.
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Dr. P and Dr. Stern out.
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