Bone and Soft-Tissue Disorders
- COMPLETE TEAR
- failure to identify ligament
- amorphous area of high SI on T1WI + T2WI with inability to define ligamentous fibers
- focal discrete complete disruption of all visible fibers
- PARTIAL / INTRASUBSTANCE TEAR
- abnormal SI within substance of ligament with some intact + some discontinuous fibers
Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury (ACL Tear)
Frequency: in up to 69% of all patients undergoing arthroscopy; in up to 72% of acutely injured knees with hemarthrosis
Mechanism: twisting, valgus impaction + internal rotation, hyperextension of knee with foot planted (football) / lower leg forcibly externally rotated during knee flexion (fall backwards while skiing)
- pivot shift test (8290% sensitive) = examiner applies valgus stress on internally rotated leg while flexing the knee; induced anterolateral rotary subluxation reduces spontaneously at 40° flexion with an audible pop
- anterior drawer sign (2280% sensitive) = proximal tibia displaces anteriorly with the knee flexed at 60°90°
- Lachman test (7799% sensitive) = same as anterior drawer sign with knee flexed at 10°20°
Location: midsubstance of ligament / near femoral attachment (in adults) / avulsion of anterior intercondylar eminence or tibial spines (in children)
◊If the ACL appears intact in one of the sagittal oblique sequences discordant findings in other sequences can be disregarded!
Site: intrasubstance tear near insertion of femoral condyle (frequently); bone avulsion (rarely)
- loss of fiber continuity + abnormal fiber orientation on PD image
- T2-hyperintense signal (= focal fluid collection / soft-tissue edema) replacing the tendon substance in acute tear
- pseudomass (hematoma + torn fibers) in intercondylar notch near femoral attachment
- concavity of anterior margin of ligament
- nondisplaced avulsion fracture of tibial eminence in children (coronal T1WI)
Secondary signs (low sensitivity, high specificity):
- anterior translation of tibia (= anterior drawer sign) by >5 mm with respect to femur measured at midsagittal plane of lateral femoral condyle
- uncovering of lateral meniscus = posterior displacement of posterior horn of lateral meniscus >3.5 mm behind tibial plateau
- bowed PCL ← increased laxity = angle between proximal + distal limbs of PCL <105°
Associated signs:
- for anterolateral rotary instability (football, skiing):
- bone bruise in lateral compartment (posterolateral tibia + terminal sulcus of lateral femoral condyle) in 4090% on fat-suppressed T2WI
- ACL intact in 28% of adolescents with bone bruise
- low-signalintensity line surrounded by region of high-signalintensity marrow edema in posterior aspect of lateral tibial plateau (= occult fracture) on STIR image
- for hyperextension injury:
- bone contusion in anterior tibial plateau + femoral condyles
- varus stress with external rotation:
- avulsion of joint capsule from lateral tibial rim (Segond fracture)
- deepening of lateral femoral sulcus >1.5 mm ← osteochondral impaction injury when femur strikes posterior tibial plateau
False-positive Dx:
- slice thickness / interslice gap too great
- adjacent fluid / synovial proliferation
- cruciate ganglion / synovial cyst
Associated injuries: meniscal tear (lateral >medial) in 65%
Rx:
- conservative: strengthening of quadriceps muscle + brace for activities
- arthroscopic reconstruction with autograft (patellar tendon / combined semitendinosus and gracilis tendon) or allograft (cadaveric patellar / Achilles tendon)
Subacute ACL Tear
Definition: few weeks after injury
- fibers better defined as hemorrhage + edema subside
- change in fiber contour + angle of residual fragments
Chronic ACL Tear
Definition: months to years after injury
- bridging fibrous scar within intercondylar notch (simulating an intact ligament with its low SI)
- disorganized scar tissue instead of linear parallel fibers
- major distal ACL fragment assumes a more horizontal orientation (= less steep than the roof of the intercondylar notch or Blumensaat line)
- ACL may fuse to posterior cruciate ligament
- complete absence of ligament
Partial ACL Tear (15%)
- Extremely difficult to diagnose! 4050% of partial tears are missed on MR!
- positive Lachman test (in 1230%)
- MR primary signs positive for injury (in 3343%)
Posterior Cruciate Ligament Injury (PCL)
Prevalence: 223% of all knee injuries
- midsubstance of PCL most frequently involved (best seen on sagittal images)
- bone avulsion from posterior tibial insertion (<10%), best seen on lateral plain film
Mechanism:
- Direct blow to proximal anterior tibia with knee flexed (dashboard injury)
- midsubstance PCL tear
- injury to posterior joint capsule
- bone contusion at anterior tibial plateau + femoral condyles farther posteriorly
- Hyperextension of knee
- avulsion of tibial attachment of PCL (with preservation of PCL substance)
- ± ACL rupture
- bone contusion in anterior tibial plateau + anterior aspect of femoral condyles
- Severe ab- / adduction + rotational forces
- + injury to collateral ligaments
Associated with: coexistent ligamentous injury in 70%
- joint effusion 6465%
- bone marrow injury 3536%
- medial meniscal tear 3235%
- lateral meniscal tear 2830%
- anterior cruciate ligament 2738%
- medial collateral ligament 2023%
- lateral collateral ligament 67%
◊A PCL injury is isolated in only 30%!
- posterior tibial laxity
- difficult to evaluate arthroscopically unless ACL torn
Outline