Interactive Transcript
0:00
Okay, this is an older woman,
0:02
not going to say what's older
0:04
to be politically correct in the current environment,
0:07
but she has a meniscus tear that is
0:12
not unique to anybody over the age of 50.
0:15
In fact,
0:16
the overwhelming majority of people over 50,
0:18
you're going to have something like this
0:20
that's maybe a little less severe.
0:23
And what does she have?
0:24
She has the typical chronic body cleavage tear
0:28
in a pseudo extruded lax meniscus
0:31
whose attachments have grown progressively
0:34
more lax over time due to the altered
0:38
hoop stresses and tension from the femur,
0:40
pressing down on the tibia.
0:42
Part of this exacerbation of hoop stresses
0:44
comes in the form of bony remodeling.
0:47
The femoral condyle is not a
0:48
nice half circle anymore.
0:50
Kind of has a little bit of a dippity-do right here.
0:53
It's also shifted.
0:54
You can see the femur is shifted
0:56
relative to the tibia,
0:57
and that doesn't do the lateral meniscus any good.
1:02
In fact,
1:02
it's a very unfriendly phenomenon
1:04
to either meniscus.
1:05
It's also a very unfriendly phenomenon to the knee notch.
1:08
Because now, you've got these spines
1:10
that are pressing against,
1:12
or in some cases,
1:13
tugging on the cruciates aberrantly or abnormally
1:17
because you're no longer aligned straight up and down,
1:20
so you end up with some notch synovitis.
1:23
So notch synovitis,
1:25
remodeling shift and meniscal pseudo extrusion,
1:29
or meniscus displacement from meniscal capsular laxity,
1:33
they all go hand in hand.
1:35
These are not surgical menisci.
1:37
You can't fix this.
1:39
Person's lying on their back,
1:40
the meniscus is not even sitting
1:42
between the femur and the tibia.
1:43
It's doing the patient no good supine.
1:45
So imagine how little good it does
1:47
than when they are standing up.
1:49
Never should you see signal in the
1:51
inner third of the meniscus,
1:53
at least not in a normal person.
1:55
You're going to see it in just about everybody.
1:58
As we said, over the age of 50,
1:59
certainly over the age of 60,
2:01
these are a source of pain.
2:04
They are not resected.
2:05
They are usually either injected
2:07
or they're treated with lubricant
2:10
injected into the joint,
2:11
steroid injected into the joint,
2:13
or some unloader brace
2:14
until finally the patient requires a total knee replacement.
2:18
Now, one of the reasons why these tears
2:21
are so often underdiagnosed,
2:23
and maybe it's a good thing
2:24
that you're under diagnosing them
2:26
because then they won't have an unnecessary resection.
2:29
But if you're going to diagnose them,
2:31
call them incidental,
2:33
trizonal, horizontal, cleavage tears
2:36
in a degenerated knee.
2:37
If you really want to slam the door shut
2:39
on a surgery,
2:41
call the tear degenerative,
2:42
although some surgeons may object
2:44
to that descriptor.
2:46
Now, again,
2:47
one of the reasons why this tear is so often undercalled
2:50
is because it's hard to see in the sagittal projection.
2:53
It's coming straight at you,
2:56
right?
2:56
It's kind of like a line.
2:57
Here it is.
2:58
There is the tear.
3:00
It doesn't often articulate with an articular surface
3:04
because it's coming into the screen.
3:06
It's going from medial to lateral.
3:09
So, you're cutting it like you're cutting through
3:11
a turkey sandwich.
3:12
So, here's the turkey.
3:14
The dark is a piece of bread,
3:15
and the other dark is the other piece of bread.
3:18
So, that is the same tear as this,
3:22
just coming straight at you into the sagittal projection.
3:26
So just for emphasis,
3:28
tears that are shaped like this in degenerated knees
3:33
that begin in the inner third
3:35
and kind of go straight out
3:36
and get a little irregular
3:38
and somewhat mushy looking,
3:39
they're non-surgical tears.
3:41
They're common,
3:42
they're chronic,
3:43
they're often degenerative.
3:44
They're even more common in women,
3:45
and they're especially common in people
3:47
who are overweight.
3:49
Let's do another one, shall.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.