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Training Collections
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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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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.
0:00
I'm Dr. Thapa.
0:01
3 00:00:02,239 --> 00:00:04,840 I'm a pediatric musculoskeletal radiologist
0:05
from Seattle Children's, and today I'll
0:06
be talking to you about musculoskeletal
0:09
conditions in the pediatric population
0:11
with a special focus on cartilage imaging.
0:14
And where better to start with cartilage
0:16
imaging and what it looks like in the pathology
0:18
than at the epiphysis and the physis, where
0:21
the majority of the pathology is going to happen,
0:23
particularly for our discussion purposes.
0:26
So we're going to concentrate on a few things.
0:30
One, we have to realize that
0:32
kids aren't small adults.
0:34
That means that we just can't take the pathology
0:37
that happens in adults and apply it to kids.
0:39
And also, kids aren't large infants.
0:43
So the things that happen in
0:44
infants are also different than what
0:45
happens in a slightly older child.
0:48
Second, we're going to focus on
0:50
a little bit of marrow changes.
0:52
What happens as an infant grows into
0:55
childhood and childhood goes into
0:57
adolescence and so on and so forth.
1:00
And we're also going to talk about some
1:02
pathology that is relevant to these
1:05
areas in the pediatric population.
1:08
And in order to talk about all of
1:10
these things, there are two overarching
1:12
themes that I will sort of harp on
1:14
every time that I think is relevant.
1:16
One is that when the skeleton is immature,
1:20
the cartilaginous junctions, and even
1:24
the bones, because of their matrix and
1:25
composition, are actually weaker than the
1:28
tendons and ligaments that attach to them.
1:30
So oftentimes the injuries are going to happen
1:32
at the level of these cartilaginous junctions.
1:33
regions as opposed to tendons or ligaments.
1:36
So that's one of the overarching themes.
1:38
The other one is that when we do have injuries,
1:42
they tend to repair much more quickly in kids.
1:47
They're a lot more resilient, and
1:48
they often have a lot more normal
1:50
variation that we have to watch out for.
1:52
So with that preamble, let's go on
1:54
to look at some cartilage imaging.
Interactive Transcript
0:00
I'm Dr. Thapa.
0:01
3 00:00:02,239 --> 00:00:04,840 I'm a pediatric musculoskeletal radiologist
0:05
from Seattle Children's, and today I'll
0:06
be talking to you about musculoskeletal
0:09
conditions in the pediatric population
0:11
with a special focus on cartilage imaging.
0:14
And where better to start with cartilage
0:16
imaging and what it looks like in the pathology
0:18
than at the epiphysis and the physis, where
0:21
the majority of the pathology is going to happen,
0:23
particularly for our discussion purposes.
0:26
So we're going to concentrate on a few things.
0:30
One, we have to realize that
0:32
kids aren't small adults.
0:34
That means that we just can't take the pathology
0:37
that happens in adults and apply it to kids.
0:39
And also, kids aren't large infants.
0:43
So the things that happen in
0:44
infants are also different than what
0:45
happens in a slightly older child.
0:48
Second, we're going to focus on
0:50
a little bit of marrow changes.
0:52
What happens as an infant grows into
0:55
childhood and childhood goes into
0:57
adolescence and so on and so forth.
1:00
And we're also going to talk about some
1:02
pathology that is relevant to these
1:05
areas in the pediatric population.
1:08
And in order to talk about all of
1:10
these things, there are two overarching
1:12
themes that I will sort of harp on
1:14
every time that I think is relevant.
1:16
One is that when the skeleton is immature,
1:20
the cartilaginous junctions, and even
1:24
the bones, because of their matrix and
1:25
composition, are actually weaker than the
1:28
tendons and ligaments that attach to them.
1:30
So oftentimes the injuries are going to happen
1:32
at the level of these cartilaginous junctions.
1:33
regions as opposed to tendons or ligaments.
1:36
So that's one of the overarching themes.
1:38
The other one is that when we do have injuries,
1:42
they tend to repair much more quickly in kids.
1:47
They're a lot more resilient, and
1:48
they often have a lot more normal
1:50
variation that we have to watch out for.
1:52
So with that preamble, let's go on
1:54
to look at some cartilage imaging.
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)
Pediatrics
Non-infectious Inflammatory
Musculoskeletal (MSK)
Metabolic
MRI
Idiopathic
Congenital
Acquired/Developmental
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