How to Read Knee MRI of Radial Meniscus Tear

Rate:
4
added:
8 years ago
views:
16158
specialty:
Orthopedics

Case description

Sports medicine knee specialist Robert LaPrade, MD PhD reviews how to read knee MRI of radial meniscus tear. It is important to be able to differentiate a radial meniscus tear on magnetic imaging because they are a lot different than other tears. In a younger patient a radial tear can be catastrophic because it completely destabilizes the meniscus.

To begin, Dr. LaPrade uses a coronal view of a right knee. In this specific case there is a radial tear of the anterolateral aspect of the lateral meniscus, which is a common location for these injuries. As the imaging moves deeper you begin to see signal intensity in the alterolateral of the lateral meniscus, where the tear is located. It is a subtle finding because this injury is not seen all well in the coronal view. You want to make sure there is not any extrusion of the meniscus and to make sure that the root attachment is still attached.

The next perspective is a sagittal view. As you move forward from the lateral side you start to see some appearance of the lateral meniscus and there is evidence for some disruption.

The best view to determine radial meniscus tears is the axial view. As you reach the center of the joint you can see a cut right through the center of the joint. The evidence of fluid indicates there is a complete disruption, which is a radial tear of the anterior aspect of the lateral meniscus. This tear makes the whole meniscus unstable and it does not act as a normal shock absorber.

tags: MRI radial meniscus meniscus meniscus tear


Łukasz Faflik
Editor

Łukasz Faflik

MD

This user also sharing

Recommended

show more