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Trochlear OCD on MRI

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Continuing from the last vignette, where I

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showed you the radiographs, here they are,

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of the abnormal versus the normal elbow.

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The abnormal side demonstrating this

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divot, if you will, the pseudo-endocondylar

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notch sign, is a representation of

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a trochlear osteochondral lesion.

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This is the capitellum. This entire thing is

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a trochlea, so there's a notch right here,

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that's the trochlear osteochondral lesion.

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It's not a capitellar osteochondral

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lesion, which is more common, but

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a trochlear osteochondral lesion.

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So let's see what that looks like on the MRI.

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Coronal T1-weighted sequence and a coronal

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fat-suppressed fluid-sensitive sequence.

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On the T1-weighted sequence, this is

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kind of like our plain radiographs.

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This is equivalent to a plain

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radiograph in an MRI, if you had one.

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We notice that there, again, is the

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capitellum and there's that divot.

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That divot should not be there.

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So that is our osteochondral lesion.

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If you look on the fluid-sensitive sequence,

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you notice that that osteochondral

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lesion does have edema around it, right?

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So it is an active lesion.

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It probably is causing

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some degree of inflammation.

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So this is the patient in October 2018,

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and we performed this examination.

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We called the osteochondral lesion,

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but there really wasn't anything else.

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At our institution, we often will

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perform arthrograms to evaluate the

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stability of an osteochondral lesion

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or to look for other concurrent problems.

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Or if we think we're missing a loose

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body, we will do an arthrogram.

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So this patient was treated conservatively,

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resting, but continued to have pain.

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So we decided to do an arthrogram.

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So I'll show you briefly how we do arthrograms.

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We do it all under ultrasound guidance

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and we use a posterior approach.

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And in the next vignette, I'll

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show you exactly how we do that.

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)

MRI

Acquired/Developmental

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