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Training Collections
Library Memberships
Black Friday Save 30%On-demand course library with video lectures, expert case reviews, and more
Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Black Friday Save 30%Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
Ultimate Learning Pass
Black Friday Save 40%Unlock access to our full Course Library and all self-paced Fellowships.
Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
Case of the Week (Free)
Get a free weekly case delivered right to your inbox.
Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
BLACK FRIDAY SAVE 30%Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
For Training Programs
Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
1 topic, 6 min.
28 topics, 1 hr. 43 min.
Basic Knee Ligament Overview
7 m.Major Tendons of the Knee
6 m.Relationships Between the Joints of the Knee
4 m.Neurovascular Bundles of the Knee
4 m.Patellar Stabilizers of the Knee
4 m.A Deeper Look at the MPFL
6 m.The Basics of the Posterior Cruciate Ligament
3 m.PCL: Coronal, Axial and Sagittal Views
4 m.PCL: Sagittal on MRI
5 m.PCL: Coronal on MRI
3 m.PCL: Axial on MRI
3 m.Basic Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) Anatomy
4 m.The Anatomy of the Anterior Cruciate Ligament Part 2
6 m.Anterior Cruciate Ligament Anatomy: Axial View
4 m.Anterior Cruciate Ligament Anatomy: Coronal View
3 m.Anterior Cruciate Ligament on MRI: Sagittal Views
4 m.Anterior Cruciate Ligament on MRI: Axial View
2 m.Anterior Cruciate Ligament on MRI: Coronal View
3 m.Medial Collateral Ligament Basics: Layer 1
4 m.Medial Collateral Ligament Basics: Layer 2 & 3
7 m.Medial Collateral Ligament (MCL) Summary
3 m.Medial Supporting Structures of the Knee
2 m.The Anatomy of the Lateral Collateral Ligament Complex - FCL
3 m.The Anatomy of the Lateral Collateral Ligament Complex (LCL) on MRI
4 m.The Anatomy of the Lateral Collateral Ligament Complex
5 m.LCL Complex on MRI
3 m.The Anatomy of the Quadriceps Femoris Tendon of the Knee
4 m.MRI Anatomy of the knee: Quadricep Femoral Tendon
5 m.21 topics, 1 hr. 13 min.
The Knee Anatomy: Posterior Medial Corner
6 m.The Posteromedial Corner: Semimembranosus Expansions
3 m.The Posteromedial Corner: Semimembranosus Expansions part 2
2 m.The Posteromedial Corner: Semimembranosus Expansions part 3
2 m.The Posteromedial Corner: Semimembranosus Expansions part 4
2 m.The Posteromedial Corner: Posterior Oblique Ligament
5 m.The Posteromedial Corner: Posterior Oblique Ligament part 2
4 m.The Posteromedial Corner: Oblique Popliteal Ligament
3 m.The Posteromedial Corner: Posterior Capsule
5 m.The Posteromedial Corner Anatomy on MRI
3 m.The Posteromedial Corner on MRI part 2
5 m.The Posteromedial Corner on MRI part 3
4 m.The Posteromedial Corner on MRI part 4
4 m.The Posteromedial Corner on MRI part 5
5 m.The Posterolateral Corner Anatomy: Introduction
4 m.The Posterolateral Corner Anatomy: LCL
6 m.The Posterolateral Corner: Biomechanics
3 m.The Posterolateral Corner Anatomy: Popliteus Muscle on MRI
4 m.The Posterolateral Corner: Arcuate and Fabellofibular Ligament
5 m.The Posterolateral Corner: Arcuate and Fabellofibular Ligament on MRI
3 m.The Posterolateral Corner Anatomy: Biceps Femoris Tendon
5 m.23 topics, 2 hr. 46 min.
Knee Case Review: 14Yr old with Posterolateral Corner Football Injury
15 m.Case Review: 54 year old Male with a Twisting Injury
9 m.Case Review: 28 Year Old Football Player Who Heard a Pop While Making a Cut
6 m.Case Review: 90 Year Old Female Patient, No History of Trauma, Now Has Swelling
10 m.Case Review: Return to 14 Year Old Football Player Case
5 m.Case Review: 37 Year Old Male with Complex Knee Instability
7 m.Case Review: PCL Mechanism of Injury
7 m.Case Review: 28 Year Old Injured in a Fall
6 m.Case Review: PCL Injury Companion Discussion
5 m.Unknown Knee Case: 54yr Old Male With Knee Swelling
5 m.Case Review: 54 Year Old Male with injury and a small PCL
4 m.Case Review: 54 Year Old Male – Assessing the Other Posterior Corner
5 m.Unknown Knee Case: 25yr Old involved in MVA
10 m.Case Review: 49 Year Old with “Osteoarthritis”
6 m.Case Review: 49 Year Old Female with Knee Pain and a Sensation of Catching
6 m.Case Review: 66 Year Old Female with Strange PCL Presentation
5 m.Case Review: 51 Year Old Male with Worsening Chronic Knee Pain
8 m.Case Review: 36 Year Old Female with Knee Locking after Kickball Game
12 m.Case Review: 23 Year Old Male with Pain After a Fall
9 m.Case Review: 22 Year Old Male with Knee Pain. Had Prior ACL Repair
12 m.Case Review: 12 Year Old Male with Problematic Graft
10 m.Case Review: 43 Year Old Male with Knee Swelling in Absence of Injury
7 m.Case Review: 12 Year Old Male with Anterior Knee Pain
7 m.5 topics, 28 min.
3 topics, 24 min.
6 topics, 40 min.
3 topics, 13 min.
0:00
Knee anatomy on MRI posteromedial corner.
0:03
Now it's time for the OPL, or oblique popliteal ligament.
0:08
Let's take our diagram.
0:09
We're looking from the back now, so this would be medial.
0:13
There's the tibia, so that's lateral. The knee is slightly
0:16
oblique, so this would be more to the front and this would be more to the back.
0:21
We know this because the POL is going to be behind the middle layer of the MCL.
0:27
And there may be a little cleft
0:29
of separation between the two.
0:31
But as we move back now, the semimembranosus makes
0:35
a posteromedial corner contribution to the posterior capsule.
0:40
And this is known as the extension
0:43
to the oblique popliteal ligament.
0:47
Now, the OPL, or oblique popliteal ligament
0:49
arises from the capsular arm of the POL
0:53
and this lateral expansion of the semimembranosus.
0:56
So it receives some contribution
0:59
from the POL, which we didn't really draw in here, but its main contribution is
1:04
from the semimembranosus posterior reflection.
1:08
And it has a course,
1:09
posterior and somewhat superior, sweeping in a wide sheet across the back.
1:15
Now look how far back it goes, the OPL.
1:20
It goes so far laterally that it actually
1:22
attaches to the osseous or cartilaginous fabella on the lateral side of the knee.
1:29
It also attaches to the menisco-femoral,
1:31
posterolateral joint capsule and to the plantaris muscle.
1:35
So this structure, which starts on the medial side,
1:38
has a contribution to posterior and posterolateral stability.
1:44
And this is somewhat counterintuitive.
1:47
The OPL also has a fibrous attachment
1:49
to the lateral aspect of the PCL and it has a supporting role in the
1:56
posteromedial, as well as the posterolateral corner.
2:00
As stated previously, it's a very thin structure,
2:03
so you'll see a sheet going across, but you're not going to be able
2:06
to separate out the capsule from the OPL, so you're not going to see it very often.
2:12
Now, the function of the OPL.
2:14
Well, let's go back to the POL for a minute.
2:16
The posterior oblique ligament,
2:18
that is a secondary stabilizer of tibial translation.
2:23
It also participates in internal and external rotation.
2:27
But the OPL is a primary restraint,
2:30
here's the OPL, it's a primary restraint to knee hyperextension.
2:34
So if you lose this and your
2:36
knee is going to overextend and the knee
2:38
is going to look somewhat like this, it's going to be bowed in the middle.
2:43
This is known as genu recurvatum.
2:46
So don't confuse the OPL in the back with the POL in the front.
2:53
These are two important structures that help support the posteral medial corner.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
Knee anatomy on MRI posteromedial corner.
0:03
Now it's time for the OPL, or oblique popliteal ligament.
0:08
Let's take our diagram.
0:09
We're looking from the back now, so this would be medial.
0:13
There's the tibia, so that's lateral. The knee is slightly
0:16
oblique, so this would be more to the front and this would be more to the back.
0:21
We know this because the POL is going to be behind the middle layer of the MCL.
0:27
And there may be a little cleft
0:29
of separation between the two.
0:31
But as we move back now, the semimembranosus makes
0:35
a posteromedial corner contribution to the posterior capsule.
0:40
And this is known as the extension
0:43
to the oblique popliteal ligament.
0:47
Now, the OPL, or oblique popliteal ligament
0:49
arises from the capsular arm of the POL
0:53
and this lateral expansion of the semimembranosus.
0:56
So it receives some contribution
0:59
from the POL, which we didn't really draw in here, but its main contribution is
1:04
from the semimembranosus posterior reflection.
1:08
And it has a course,
1:09
posterior and somewhat superior, sweeping in a wide sheet across the back.
1:15
Now look how far back it goes, the OPL.
1:20
It goes so far laterally that it actually
1:22
attaches to the osseous or cartilaginous fabella on the lateral side of the knee.
1:29
It also attaches to the menisco-femoral,
1:31
posterolateral joint capsule and to the plantaris muscle.
1:35
So this structure, which starts on the medial side,
1:38
has a contribution to posterior and posterolateral stability.
1:44
And this is somewhat counterintuitive.
1:47
The OPL also has a fibrous attachment
1:49
to the lateral aspect of the PCL and it has a supporting role in the
1:56
posteromedial, as well as the posterolateral corner.
2:00
As stated previously, it's a very thin structure,
2:03
so you'll see a sheet going across, but you're not going to be able
2:06
to separate out the capsule from the OPL, so you're not going to see it very often.
2:12
Now, the function of the OPL.
2:14
Well, let's go back to the POL for a minute.
2:16
The posterior oblique ligament,
2:18
that is a secondary stabilizer of tibial translation.
2:23
It also participates in internal and external rotation.
2:27
But the OPL is a primary restraint,
2:30
here's the OPL, it's a primary restraint to knee hyperextension.
2:34
So if you lose this and your
2:36
knee is going to overextend and the knee
2:38
is going to look somewhat like this, it's going to be bowed in the middle.
2:43
This is known as genu recurvatum.
2:46
So don't confuse the OPL in the back with the POL in the front.
2:53
These are two important structures that help support the posteral medial corner.
Report
Description
Faculty
Stephen J Pomeranz, MD
Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online
ProScan Imaging
Tags
Vascular
Trauma
Syndromes
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
MRI
Knee
Idiopathic
Iatrogenic
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