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Training Collections
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Fellowship Certificate™ Programs
Black Friday Save 30%Practice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
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Noon Conference (Free)
Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
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Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
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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.
2 topics, 5 min.
38 topics, 2 hr. 9 min.
Introduction to Pediatric Imaging
2 m.Hyaline Cartilage Anatomy
3 m.The Physis & Calcification Centers
3 m.Epiphyseal Cartilage
4 m.Fibrocartilage & Hyaline Cartilage
6 m.MR Appearance of Cartilage In Different Age Groups
5 m.FOPE
4 m.Lymphoma of the Bone
12 m.Blount Disease
4 m.Gymnast’s Wrist
5 m.Pre-ossification Centers
3 m.Elbow Effusion
2 m.OCD In the Elbow
3 m.Trochlear OCD on MRI
2 m.Trochlear OCD on Arthrogram
2 m.Ultrasound Guided Arthrogram Injection
3 m.OCD In the Capitellum, Loose Body
3 m.Avascular Necrosis in the Elbow
3 m.The Fish Tail Deformity
4 m.OCD In the Knee, LAME
4 m.Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease on X-Ray
3 m.Legg-Calvé-Perthes disease on MRI
5 m.Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
4 m.Abscess
4 m.Infection in the Physis
3 m.Tug Lesion
7 m.Salter-Harris Classification System
5 m.Salter-Harris Fracture on X-Ray
3 m.Salter-Harris 2 in the Shoulder
3 m.Salter-Harris 3 in the Knee
3 m.Salter-Harris 3 on CT Imaging
3 m.Indications for MRI in a Pediatric Shoulder
4 m.Performing Arthrograms in the Shoulder
3 m.Ultrasound Guidance in Shoulder Arthrogram
3 m.Salter-Harris 5 on MRI
3 m.Physeal Injury, Cartilage Deformity
5 m.Chondroblastoma in the Knee
5 m.Chondroblastoma in the Ankle
5 m.9 topics, 41 min.
3 topics, 13 min.
3 topics, 12 min.
13 topics, 39 min.
Anorexia Nervosa
3 m.Chondroblastoma
4 m.Chondroblastoma in the Shoulder
4 m.Complex Regional Pain Syndrome
4 m.Lipoblastoma
4 m.Leukemia
4 m.Leukemia, Assessing for Asymmetry
4 m.Myositis Ossificans
3 m.Normal Patchy Bone Marrow
4 m.Osteoblastoma
4 m.Adamantinoma verus Osteofibrous Dysplasia
2 m.Osteoid Osteoma in the Foot
3 m.Osteoid Osteoma in the Finger
3 m.5 topics, 11 min.
0:01
This is a nice case which illustrates the importance of getting plain
0:07
radiographs to accompany any cross-sectional study, particularly MRI.
0:13
In the middle, we have axial fat-suppressed fluid-sensitive sequence,
0:17
and on the right, we have a coronal fat-suppressed
0:20
fluid-sensitive sequence.
0:22
And right away, we noticed an area of bright signal abnormality.
0:26
It's very heterogeneous.
0:28
It has areas of what looks like fluid, what looks like septations, and what looks like
0:35
maybe some calcification or blood, or mineralization at the periphery.
0:41
It's very ugly looking, if you will.
0:44
And what muscle does it involve?
0:45
It looks like it involves the vastus intermedius.
0:50
Lateralis over here and we have got the medialis over here.
0:53
So it looks like it's involving the vastus intermedius, mainly.
0:57
In coronal image, it doesn't do anything to relieve us of what this may be.
1:03
So there's a broad differential.
1:05
It could be trauma, it could be tumor, it could be inflammatory process.
1:11
So this is where the plain radiograph really comes into view, because the plain
1:15
radiograph is going to reveal what you see here on this image.
1:20
This pattern of calcification.
1:22
Okay, this pattern of calcification, very peripheral.
1:26
It looks like it sort of follows the fibers of the muscle.
1:31
You see it over here. You see it on this side.
1:33
There really isn't any bone destruction.
1:35
There's no periosteal reaction.
1:37
And as we dive a little deeper
1:40
into the history, the patient did have a direct blow to this area.
1:44
So this is very consistent with myositis ossificans
1:48
or dystrophic calcification from trauma.
1:51
Had we got this plain radiograph and it showed very chunky calcifications,
1:55
periosteal reaction, soft tissue component,
1:58
then our differential would have been completely different.
2:01
We would have been leading down the path of a malignancy.
2:05
But because of these wispy
2:07
patterns of calcification sort of conforming to the
2:12
the pennate of the muscles, we can be confident that we're looking
2:16
at just a simple hematoma with dystrophic calcification.
2:20
Myositis ossificans.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
This is a nice case which illustrates the importance of getting plain
0:07
radiographs to accompany any cross-sectional study, particularly MRI.
0:13
In the middle, we have axial fat-suppressed fluid-sensitive sequence,
0:17
and on the right, we have a coronal fat-suppressed
0:20
fluid-sensitive sequence.
0:22
And right away, we noticed an area of bright signal abnormality.
0:26
It's very heterogeneous.
0:28
It has areas of what looks like fluid, what looks like septations, and what looks like
0:35
maybe some calcification or blood, or mineralization at the periphery.
0:41
It's very ugly looking, if you will.
0:44
And what muscle does it involve?
0:45
It looks like it involves the vastus intermedius.
0:50
Lateralis over here and we have got the medialis over here.
0:53
So it looks like it's involving the vastus intermedius, mainly.
0:57
In coronal image, it doesn't do anything to relieve us of what this may be.
1:03
So there's a broad differential.
1:05
It could be trauma, it could be tumor, it could be inflammatory process.
1:11
So this is where the plain radiograph really comes into view, because the plain
1:15
radiograph is going to reveal what you see here on this image.
1:20
This pattern of calcification.
1:22
Okay, this pattern of calcification, very peripheral.
1:26
It looks like it sort of follows the fibers of the muscle.
1:31
You see it over here. You see it on this side.
1:33
There really isn't any bone destruction.
1:35
There's no periosteal reaction.
1:37
And as we dive a little deeper
1:40
into the history, the patient did have a direct blow to this area.
1:44
So this is very consistent with myositis ossificans
1:48
or dystrophic calcification from trauma.
1:51
Had we got this plain radiograph and it showed very chunky calcifications,
1:55
periosteal reaction, soft tissue component,
1:58
then our differential would have been completely different.
2:01
We would have been leading down the path of a malignancy.
2:05
But because of these wispy
2:07
patterns of calcification sort of conforming to the
2:12
the pennate of the muscles, we can be confident that we're looking
2:16
at just a simple hematoma with dystrophic calcification.
2:20
Myositis ossificans.
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
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