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Case Review: 76 Year Old Male with Severe Hip Pain

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0:02

Let's take a look at this

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78-year-old man who's got pretty severe

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hip pain and multiple findings.

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And as we wind down here, we have covered

0:12

labral abnormalities, hyaline cartilage

0:15

abnormalities, and capsular abnormalities.

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And now we're going to show you a

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bone abnormality, which initially was

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missed by a very experienced observer.

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Now what the reader didn't miss

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were all these erosions on the

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femoral side of the articulation.

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It's a little strange that there aren't a

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lot of erosions on the acetabular side.

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But let's give credit where credit is due.

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Those are probably erosive

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changes from an arthropathy.

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But it's very hard to justify these erosions

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causing this much marrow edema so far

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away from the home base of the erosions.

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Generally, the swelling or edema in the

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bone is going to be around the erosions and

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not extending all the way down the femoral

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cervical neck to the intertrochanteric area.

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So you have to change your thinking here.

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You can't write off the edema to

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simple swelling from arthropathy.

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It's too extensive,

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it's too broad, it's too distant.

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So then you gotta go goodwill hunting.

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And when you do, you very subtly see some

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wavy signal in the femoral cervical neck.

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Now I admit that this is a challenge

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to see on the water-weighted image.

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It's a little easier in retrospect,

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but if I really tightly window it, you can

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see kind of a little almost like a spider

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like crack that's going up and down.

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It's a little more apparent here on the T1.

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There it is, right there.

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That's a crack.

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So is that.

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It's squiggly.

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It's wiggly.

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It's irregular.

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In fact, it's so irregular that the femoral

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cervical neck is actually a crumble bunny.

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It's crumbling right beneath our very eyes.

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But the findings are so delicate

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that you could easily miss the crack.

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Here's the crack right in

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the femoral cervical neck.

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Let me blow it up and make it as obvious

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as I can even though it's still subtle.

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There it is.

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Now another critical point about this crack

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is that it's located within the capsule.

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So how do we tell that?

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We look at the effusion and if we draw a line

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from the capsular edge to the capsular edge,

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everything above this line is intra-articular.

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Everything below this line is extra-articular.

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So let's, let's draw it again

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capsule to capsule, so let's put up the line.

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Here we are, capsule to capsule.

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Everything above this line is

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going to be intra-articular.

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Everything below that line is

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going to be extra-articular.

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So this has an intra-articular component.

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It's above that line, right here.

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Therefore, it places the femoral head at very

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high risk for ischemia and avascular necrosis.

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Finally, let me scroll the T2.

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Now the T2 is not a very useful,

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medullary, spongy, and chondral bone sequence.

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But even the T2 still shows the squiggly,

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wiggly, thin, irregular line of an

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intra-articular, femoral, cervical neck

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fracture, which it's critical not to

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miss because the patient must get off

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this hip, otherwise the fracture will

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complete and they'll surely go on to AVN.

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Now granted, this patient needs a hip

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replacement anyway, but you don't want somebody

3:24

going on to a displaced fracture because that

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would produce somewhat of a catastrophic pain

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syndrome and would be extremely awkward to

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have a patient walking around on a hip like

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this and then complete the fracture without

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bringing it to the clinician's attention.

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Thanks, and I've enjoyed going

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through bone, cartilage, labrum,

3:45

and capsule with you in the hip.

3:47

A most difficult joint.

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Trauma

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Hip & Thigh

Congenital

Bone & Soft Tissues

Acquired/Developmental

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