Interactive Transcript
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We are looking at an MRI of
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the knee of an eight-month-old.
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On the left, I have a fluid
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sensitive fat-suppressed sequence.
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On the right, I have a T1-weighted sequence.
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We know it's T1 because
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the fat is nice and bright.
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The marrow, which has fat, the
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metaphysis is bright, the epiphysis
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that's ossified is also bright.
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But there's a big chunk right over
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here that is the epiphyseal cartilage
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that is sort of gray in color.
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Thank you.
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You notice the difference in the
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cartilage appearance between a T2
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FATSAT or a STIR or a pool of
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some sort of fat-suppressed image.
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Look at how much variation
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there is between cartilage here, the cartilage
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in the big bulk of the epiphysis, and
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cartilage on the articular surface.
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Remember we talked about initially on
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the vignettes that the composition of
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cartilage is vastly different depending
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on where in the epiphysis you look.
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Which do you think is a better comparison
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image for cartilage.
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Is it this one, or is it this one?
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If you said this one, you were wrong.
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It's this one because here you
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can actually see the difference in
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what the cartilage looks like.
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And again, what causes the difference?
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It's the amount of free water that's available.
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This tells me here that the articular
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cartilage over here is very bright.
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So the amount of water here is great.
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Over here, the epiphyseal cartilage,
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although you do have water, that water is
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not free; it's bound to macromolecules.
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That's why it doesn't have the same bright
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appearance as the articular cartilage.
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The physeal cartilage has cells, but
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remember those cells are very big.
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There are huge cartilage cells as opposed to
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the cartilage cells over here, and those cells
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have a lot of water in them that is unbound.
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So that's why that also appears as bright.
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Contrast that to what the cartilage looks like
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here in the epiphysis on a T1-weighted sequence.
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It's uniformly gray.
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I can't tell where the articular cartilage
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begins, and the physeal cartilage ends.
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Vice versa, I can't tell where the
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epiphyseal cartilage begins, and the
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physeal cartilage here ends, okay?
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So, it's really not a great way of
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differentiating the different types.
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Also, I mentioned to look for
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the trilaminar appearance.
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That trilaminar appearance is
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really, really well seen on this fat
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suppressed, fluid-sensitive sequence.
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Can you see that here?
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Not really.
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It just looks like a single dark gray blob.
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So, if you want to look at cartilage, you
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should be focusing on a fluid-sensitive,
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fat-suppressed sequence like over here.
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And you can scroll.
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You can see, you can look for that
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trilaminar appearance throughout.
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Okay, this is a beautiful image here.
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You've got a nice trilaminar
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appearance throughout the entire
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visible portion of the distal femur.
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There may be areas where you
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don't quite see it that well.
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It's just because of the slice thickness.
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As long as there is some smooth continuity from
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one slice to the other, I know that trilaminar
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appearance and that, and that physeal cartilage
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and the metaphysis are just doing just fine.
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Contrast hyaline cartilage, what
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we've been talking about,
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to the fibrous cartilage that you see
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in your meniscus.
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Look how dark that meniscus is in the fibrous
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cartilage, as opposed to the hyaline cartilage.
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Again, it's dark here on the T1-weighted
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sequence, but the difference in those
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two structures is just not that great.
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I'm going to bring you this sequence
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over here, and this is called the Dual
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Echo Steady State (DESS). You know,
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it's basically a gradient sequence.
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It's a gradient sequence.
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We know that because the cartilage
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is awfully, awfully bright, right?
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And the bone is very, very dark.
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Why is the bone so dark?
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Because it's a gradient sequence
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and there's trabecula in there.
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The mineralization, the trabecula causes
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what's called susceptibility artifact.
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The susceptibility artifacts
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lead to this dark signal.
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So there's a beautiful contrast between
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bone and cartilage, but there's not a lot of
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difference between, again, epiphyseal cartilage,
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physeal cartilage, and articular cartilage.
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But it's a great way to look at the trilaminar
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appearance in the sense that because you
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have this dark band of zonal provisional
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calcification, it does a nice job of separating
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the brightness of the metaphyseal spongiosa,
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remember that's the area where it's very
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vascular, and it's where the blood vessels come
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in and bring in nutrients and apoptotic factors
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to cause chondrocytes to die and form bone. The
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metaphyseal spongiosa layer, zonal provisional
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calcification, and the physeal layer, which
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is filled with those hypertrophic cartilage.
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Again, because it's not a great differentiator
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between epiphyseal and physeal cartilage
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and articular cartilage, but it's a great
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way to look at your trilaminar appearance.
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And these gradient sequences are often
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acquired in an isovolumetric thin slice.
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What does that mean?
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That means we can reconstruct
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this in any plane that we want.
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For example, here's that same image
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that we've reconstructed in a
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sagittal plane and we get a great
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view of that trilaminar appearance.
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Again, using the susceptibility artifacts
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caused by the trabecular bone to our advantage.
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