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Trochlear OCD on Arthrogram

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When we do an arthrogram, there are

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several locations we can insert the needle.

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We could insert it at the radiocapitellar joint,

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right over here, or at the posterior aspect

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of the joint, at the ulnar trochlear joint.

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I prefer this joint because it's a much bigger

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space, and it's a lot easier to get into.

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So let me show you, in a diagram,

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exactly how I would come over here.

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Okay, so now we have this

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lateral radiograph of the elbow.

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And let me just orient you so

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we know what we're looking at.

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So we're looking through the

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capitellum and the trochlea at this

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point because it's a lateral view.

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Here is your radial head,

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and here is your olecranon.

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So once you have that, I'm going to erase some

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of this so you can see that a little bit better.

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One other thing I want to point out.

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Let's follow this anterior humeral

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line, and look what it does on one side.

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And we're going to follow the

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posterior aspect of the capitellum.

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Go like this.

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At this point, the bone is awfully thin.

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That's why, just as an aside,

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when a child breaks his or her elbow,

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it typically happens at this location

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because the bone is thinnest there.

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So this causes a supracondylar fracture.

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A supracondylar fracture is the most

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common fracture that happens in children.

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And this is the reason why, because

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the bone is so thin over there.

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Okay?

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That's an important aside

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to sort of keep in mind.

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But our purpose today is to talk

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about the approach of the ultrasound.

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The ultrasound needle posteriorly

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is going to go like this.

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It's going to elevate the fat pad and

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that's how you know you're in the joint.

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This is a very, very big space.

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The patient is typically positioned

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like this with the elbow flexed.

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Now let's go on and see the actual

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ultrasound and see what that looks like.

Report

Faculty

Mahesh Thapa, MD, MEd, FAAP

Division Chief of Musculoskeletal Imaging, and Director of Diagnostic Imaging Professor

Seattle Children's & University of Washington

Tags

X-Ray (Plain Films)

Trauma

Pediatrics

Non-infectious Inflammatory

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

Iatrogenic

Acquired/Developmental

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