Interactive Transcript
0:00
Okay, so before we saw a great example
0:03
of a FOPE lesion, which is a normal
0:04
variant, uh, happens in teenage kids,
0:07
typically in the central portion.
0:09
Now I'm going to show you pathology
0:11
that can mimic a FOPE lesion.
0:13
So here we are looking at, again, a dual
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echo steady state or a gradient sequence.
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We know that because the marrow is very dark.
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We can still see the prolaminar
0:22
appearance of the cartilage, and
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the cartilage is uniformly bright.
0:24
So we know this is a gradient sequence.
0:26
I want to direct your attention to this area
0:28
over here, which is the proximal tibial physis.
0:33
The majority of the physis is still open, as
0:35
can be seen by the bright signal over here.
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Can't appreciate the trilaminar
0:38
appearance as much, but that's
0:39
okay because this is an older kid.
0:41
This kid is, I think, uh,
0:43
13 years old at this point.
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But as we go down, as we sort of follow with
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our, with our marker, we get to this barrier.
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And this barrier is much, much bigger
0:53
than we saw with that FOPE lesion, right?
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That should be a clue that
0:56
this is not quite right.
0:58
Something has happened to this growth plate.
1:01
Something in the past, such that now there's
1:04
been what's called a bony bridge formation.
1:07
We call this a bony bridge.
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Bone tissue bridges the physis.
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Again now, I'm going to the
1:13
other side, it's also bright.
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So that area is normal.
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Normal, normal, normal.
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Bad.
1:18
Normal, normal, normal.
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But as you notice, the normal, as it
1:21
approaches the physis, gets a little narrow.
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That's also a characteristic of this lesion.
1:25
So I'm going to scroll back and forth
1:27
to show you that really is a true thing.
1:29
And again, it's not just this area,
1:31
but it's actually a pretty wide area.
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In fact, you can see that that
1:35
path of that physis, path of that
1:37
cartilage, has actually dipped down
1:40
in the area of abnormality.
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So this is all part of the pathology.
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Okay?
1:44
So here again, as we scroll back and
1:46
forth, now we get to the normal area.
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So as we go to the more peripheral
1:50
locations, this here is normal.
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This is the normal tiny bridges that form.
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You notice how tiny it is, how the,
1:58
how the undulation is not a dramatic
2:00
movement one way or the other.
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As you go back and forth, again,
2:04
you notice here, this is okay.
2:05
It's, it's a little bigger, but again, it's
2:08
not a big, huge, dramatic change, okay?
2:11
As we go back and forth, you can
2:12
see what's normal, what's abnormal,
2:14
and this is definitely abnormal.
2:16
Compare that to the more
2:17
distal femoral appearance.
2:19
Very, very nice.
2:21
Again, centrally, we lose it a little bit,
2:23
but, again, that's where you start to develop.
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Uh, an eye for what normal is here,
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that's normal, even though we don't
2:29
see that trilaminar appearance.
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That's because it's central,
2:32
it's beginning to fuse.
2:33
So I think you get an idea of what
2:36
abnormal and what normal looks like.
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Now the question becomes, what caused this?
2:41
So there are several things that can cause this.
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It has to be remote.
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It's something that happened a while ago.
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This just didn't develop two days ago.
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The two most common things that cause
2:51
pathology in this location are infection.
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The metaphysis, as we mentioned
2:56
before, is a rich bed of vessels.
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Vessels, uh, that have little
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arcades, that are slow-flowing blood.
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So a lot of blood-borne pathogens can embed
3:07
themselves in the metaphysis and cause you to
3:10
have infection; it can cause you to have tumors.
3:13
That can damage the physis, that can
3:15
damage the metaphysis, and when those
3:16
blood vessels are damaged, um, there's no
3:18
longer normal endochondral ossification.
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So this is a disruption in endochondral
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ossification such that a bony
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bridge has now formed between your
3:28
epiphysis and your metaphysis.
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What else can cause it?
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Trauma.
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Oftentimes kids have trauma and any trauma
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that causes injury to the physis, like
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a Salter-Harris injury, and we'll get to
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Salter-Harris in later videos, but a Salter
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Harris injury basically is an injury to
3:45
the physis; it can be just the physis, it
3:47
can involve epiphysis and the metaphysis.
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So as long as the physeal injury has occurred,
3:54
it's a type of Salter-Harris fracture.
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So that can lead, if it's severe
3:58
enough, to this type of pathology.
4:00
I'm going to show you what this looks like.
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So what happened in this kid?
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Fortunately, we have prior imaging.
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Let's go back to the original scan.
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Four years earlier, we have this MR.
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This is a fluid-sensitive,
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fat-suppressed sequence.
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You guys are probably wondering,
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why is the field of view so big?
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Why is this grainy? Why does
4:22
it look like an adult MRI?
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A couple of reasons.
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One, the child is smaller, you know, so you
4:28
have smaller, less tissue. The signal is
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not as great, so we have to give a bigger
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field of view to get adequate signal.
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Number two, oftentimes kids come in with
4:37
vague complaints about knee pain and
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we actually don't know where exactly that
4:40
pain is, so we often have to get a bigger
4:42
field of view just to get an idea of
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where the, uh, where the abnormality is.
4:46
Once we find that out, we can hone
4:48
in on the problem.
4:49
But as we look at this original scan
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for this child who had knee pain, we see
4:54
this abnormal signal involving pretty
4:57
much the majority or entirety of the
4:59
epiphysis and the metaphysis, right?
5:02
Let's look at it on a T1-weighted sequence.
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Uh, I'm gonna zoom this
5:06
up just a little bit more.
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Look at this marrow.
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This marrow is completely abnormal.
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It should be white, it should be
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fatty, and it's completely replaced
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by this gray, dark structure, okay?
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So here's a little tip for you.
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Normal marrow, even if it's
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hematopoietic marrow as opposed to
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fatty marrow, does have 40 percent fat.
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So that normal marrow, even though
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it's hematopoietic, should still be a
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little brighter than adjacent muscle.
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This is not brighter than the adjacent muscle.
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It's about the same, so we know
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that this isn't normal marrow.
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That's one clue.
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But look at this nice clear demarcation.
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Here's normal; here it's not.
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I think that abnormality is really
5:52
striking on the T1-weighted sequence.
5:54
So this ended up being
5:55
lymphoma, lymphoma of the bone.
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That's what happened as far as
5:59
the final pathology.
6:00
So let's now look at, in 2006, a
6:03
year later, how that's progressed.
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I'm going to bring the STIR signal down again.
6:08
Here, again, we see the area of
6:10
abnormality, but look at the physis.
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Look at the normal physis on the right.
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Look at the abnormal physis.
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A lot more undulation has
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developed, a lot more blurriness.
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We can't really appreciate
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the trilaminar appearance.
6:20
Look at the physis above and
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look at this physis over here.
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I'm going to bring a T1-weighted sequence down.
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Again, very, very abnormal.
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Again, low signal here; almost looks
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a little wider than we expect it to.
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Here's the normal physis up here,
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normal physis on the contralateral side.
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I'm going to take you further along to 2007.
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How does that look in 2007?
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Here's a STIR sequence.
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Aha!
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Look at this.
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You can already see the beginnings
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of the physeal bar right over here.
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It's not quite as mature as our original
6:52
image that I showed you, but look at this.
6:53
This is abnormal.
6:55
On the other side, you see these little
6:57
brushes of high signal; that's okay.
7:00
That's normal hematopoietic marrow in a child.
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This is probably not normal if it's an
7:05
adult, but if it's a kid, this is okay.
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This brush-like appearance in the metaphysis.
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Let's look at that on T1.
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See this?
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This is okay.
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These little areas of tongue-like tissue.
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This, you can appreciate, is not
7:18
normal because look how normal it is.
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The shape of the physis is completely abnormal.
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Look how blurry it is over here versus
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the nice sharp margins on either side.
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That is abnormal.
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So this child in 2007 was
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beginning to form a physeal bar.
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Now let's zoom over to
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2008, even more progression.
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That area of edema is slightly less conspicuous.
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Maybe you see a little bit of the growth plate
7:43
better, but again, there's no clear path of
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this bright signal from this side to this side.
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It has a blockade, and that's
7:52
the physeal bar maturing.
7:55
Finally, I'm going to show you some radiographs.
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Let's take a look at 2008
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again, December of 2008.
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You can still see the physis, but
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there are portions that are sclerotic.
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So we know that, remember this is
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a two-dimensional representation
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of a three-dimensional structure.
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So here, even though we do see some areas of
8:12
clearness, we know that's maybe in front of or
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behind an area of physeal bar that's forming.
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So we're seeing through some of it.
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Uh, that's abnormal.
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And this is a leg length study.
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We're trying to see if that physeal bar has
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caused any problems in the patient's leg length.
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And if you look at this, you can see that
8:30
the left lower extremity, if you sort of
8:32
line up the top of the plafond on the right
8:34
side versus the plafond on the left side.
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Let me zoom it up; maybe you can
8:37
appreciate that a little bit more.
8:39
This is clearly higher than this side, so
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it means that the left lower extremity is
8:44
shorter, likely because of that physeal bar.
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Finally, we get to our original
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image that shows our physeal bar.
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I want to do one last thing just
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to give you an idea of what the
8:55
significance of the physeal bar is.
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I'm going to create a MIPS image
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from this sagittal slice sequence.
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Remember this is very thin slices
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obtained in isovolumetric parameters so
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we can create nice 3D reconstructions.
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We are going to create 3D MIPS images.
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Here is the original axial image.
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Here is a reconstructed
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sagittal image on the upper right.
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And the lower right is the
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reconstructed coronal image.
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I'm going to move this bar over
9:25
to the area of abnormality.
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I'm going to turn it so we have a
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nice cross-sectional view of that.
9:31
And here I'm going to turn this a little
9:33
bit, so we're really representing that area.
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So over here, if we change the slice
9:39
thickness, as we do over here with the
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MIPS imaging, I'm going to make it a
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little bigger for you, so you can see.
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So this right here is the area of the physeal bar.
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And this entire gray area is the
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area of the normal physeal cartilage.
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So what the surgeons want to know is what
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is the area of this relative to the area
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of the overall cartilaginous surface.
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And we can take a measurement for you.
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Come down here, go to the freehand
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measurement tool, and all you have to
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do is just go around with your pen, try
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to get all that area as best you can.
10:19
Again, it's an estimate,
10:21
but it's a good estimate.
10:23
So on the lower right-hand screen, you
10:24
may not be able to read it, but it says 0.81
10:27
centimeters squared.
10:29
So now we compare that with the
10:32
overall cartilaginous surface.
10:34
So this one is 22 centimeters squared.
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So they can compare the volumes.
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And I typically report the numbers
10:43
and I don't make any judgments as far
10:45
as, you know, should they do this?
10:46
Or should they do that?
10:47
They can decide, because each surgeon is
10:49
different. Their threshold for, uh, cutting
10:52
the physeal bar or doing an epiphysiodesis, which
10:55
is basically lysing the entire physis, depends
10:58
on age, the amount of, uh, bar that's present.
11:01
So I just report the numbers
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and let the surgeons decide
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individually what they want to do.
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And so this is an example of a physeal
11:08
bar from a previous injury to the physis.
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