Interactive Transcript
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Let's talk arthrography MRI.
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Please feel free to go to the axial projection
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for discussion of technique in the axial vignette.
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But I'm going to talk primarily about some of the
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observational and pitfalls that occur in coronal
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evaluation, and also what I like and why I like it.
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So I've given you a, a menu.
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On the far left is a T1 fat
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suppression using 2D technique, 3.
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5 millimeter cuts.
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It's really, really dark, isn't it?
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The bones are dark, the muscles are dark, the
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fat is dark, everything's dark except the fluid.
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So this is what I call the black and white image.
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The whites are white, the darks are
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dark, kind of like Tide, the detergent.
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Now the reason that's good is you get exquisite
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contrast interfaces between ligaments,
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fibrocartilage, and intraarticular fluid.
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The reason it's potentially bad is because
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it can be very confusing and confusing.
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If you have multiple abnormalities and edema in
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multiple territories and trying to figure out
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which is the territory that really dominates.
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So for that reason, um, it's not the sequence that
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I would use all by itself in the coronal projection.
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If you've looked at the axial vignette, you know
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that we showed you a very exquisite 3D gradient
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echo with about a one millimeter series of cuts.
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Where everything was black in the bones, black
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in the fat, dark in the muscles, and bright in
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the joint as well, but with a thinner slice.
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So another potential disadvantage of this
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T1 fat suppression technique is that the
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spatial detail is not going to be as high.
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Three and a half millimeters versus one
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millimeter for through-plane resolution.
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On the other hand, most scanners can do it.
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So if you have an older scanner, that's 10, 15, 20
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years old, you can do a T1 with fat suppression.
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So it has some, some technical versatility.
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Spinecho, any scanner can do it.
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Any scanner.
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Low field, high field, older scanners, newer scanners.
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So it has that advantage.
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It also has the advantage of showing
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you something other than fluid.
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In other words, you're looking at gadolinium.
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So, if there were fluid out here, you wouldn't know
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if that fluid was extravasated, or whether that fluid
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was from a rotator cuff tear, or it might be a
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little difficult, might be a little more challenging.
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The same thing down here, you had a little tear
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down here, is it extravasation, or was it a
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technical issue, or is it truly a hole with water
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going through the axillary portion of the IGHL?
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Whereas if it's gadolinium Based T1
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shortening, right on T1, and it's out here.
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It can really pretty much only be from extravasation.
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Unless you punctured it.
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Unless you punctured that spot.
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And as I said, my preferred locus for injecting is with
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the patient prone, in the back, in the posterior interval.
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So if you stay away from this area, and gadolinium
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is out here, the odds are, it's not edema, it's,
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it's actually extravasation of the gadolinium itself.
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So this has a great deal of specificity
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with regards to geography of the contrast.
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Now on the far right, I've got a PD fat suppression.
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This has, this has the advantage of being
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highly sensitive to all things water.
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It has the disadvantage of being
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highly sensitive to all things water.
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We have water here, but what if we had water here?
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We got a little water here, what if we had water
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here, and here, and here, what would it mean?
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It, in some ways, because of its sensitivity,
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diminishes the specificity of what the water
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means once you put contrast in the joint.
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So this has some advantages and
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some disadvantages, they all do.
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Now if I was going to choose, I would probably
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choose the T1 with contrast, without fat suppression,
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and then I would choose this one to the far right.
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But, you know, it's dealer's choice.
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Some of you may like the blackness of the bone marrow
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and the blackness of the fibrocartilage up against
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the whiteness of the contrast intraarticularly.
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And if you're new to the game, why not all three?
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You know, take your time.
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Few pitfalls.
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As you're scrolling back and forth, no, that's not a tear.
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That is simply a recess between the biceps and the SGHL,
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the superior glenohumeral ligament that's coming at you.
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That is not abnormal.
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You'll see hyaline interposition right here at the base
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of the biceps and right against and underneath the SGHL.
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Now what's this structure?
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There's another recess between the biceps
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and the coracohumeral ligament which forms
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the deepest layer of the rotator cuff.
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So we have multiple bands.
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CHL, coracohumeral ligament,
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recess, biceps and labral anchor.
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And then the SGHL and its recess.
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So those are some potential pitfalls in
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analysis of the superior labral area.
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Now we're not technically talking superior labrum
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and SLAP lesions, but it is part of the instability,
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microinstability spectrum, so I've thrown it in.
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What about down low?
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You know, the coronal projection
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is all about up high and down low.
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Because of your position.
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You're orthogonal to these areas.
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And you're perpendicular to them.
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So down low You've got the labral ligamentous complex.
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Now I like to see the axis of my labrum.
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Not my SGHL, but my labrum point this way.
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Somewhere around 60 degrees.
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So if this is the horizontal, this is about 60 degrees.
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45 degrees, okay.
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65 degrees, okay.
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When I start to see my labrum tilt.
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So when I start to see my labrum do this.
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Tilt downward, like that.
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Or I start to see my labrum medialize.
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Or move this way, relative.
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to the glenoid cup.
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In other words, the labrum is now over here.
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Now I know I've got a detachment.
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And some form of anteroaxillary labral shift.
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On the other hand, when you distend the joint, let's
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pull down the axial for a minute, when you distend
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the joint, look how medial a normal capsule can be.
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I'm gonna make it a little smaller so you can see it better.
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It's really medial, almost to the anterior scapular ridge.
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So it's not surprising that you
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get a lot of distension here.
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So don't confuse this medialized collection of
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fluid with stripping or periosteal separation.
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That can be and frequently is normal, especially
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in athletes who have stretched out their capsule.
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Also, do not be put off by the fact that the axillary band
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of the IGHL doesn't take off at the apex of the labrum.
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It usually takes off right at the junction.
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of the labrum and the bone, right there.
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So it comes almost straight down
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and then starts to curl over.
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That is also a potential source of confusion
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for most newbies and youngins to MRI.
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Also pay very careful attention to the
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insertion, posteriorly, of the IGHL.
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Tears of this area frequently scar back down.
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So you want to look at the shape.
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Is it very smooth, even though it's attached?
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Is it smooth, or is it lumpy,
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bumpy, and lobulated, and irregular?
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of the IGHL and have a look at it.
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Most of these tears occur right here in the middle.
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And then go to the front.
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Then go all the way to the front of the IGHL, right
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there, and look for a potential haggle or a B haggle.
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So this is a very important area for assessment, sometimes
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you can tear here, sometimes you can tear here, sometimes
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you can tear in both places, in which case you get an igle.
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And remember these axes that we've
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talked about in the coronal projection.
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