Artigo Revisado por pares

The “Floating” Meniscus: MRI in Knee Trauma and Implications for Surgery

2005; American Roentgen Ray Society; Volume: 184; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2214/ajr.184.1.01840200

ISSN

1546-3141

Autores

Ravi S. Bikkina, Charles A. Tujo, Albert B. Schraner, Nancy M. Major,

Tópico(s)

Shoulder Injury and Treatment

Resumo

We describe 21 cases involving meniscal injury in which the meniscus appears free-floating on MRI of the knee. In these cases, the meniscus is completely surrounded by fluid. Correlation with surgical reports shows that the "floating" meniscus corresponds to a meniscal avulsion or detachment from the tibial plateau with an associated disruption of the meniscotibial coronary ligaments, which attach the meniscus to the tibia, allowing fluid to encompass the meniscus. A floating meniscus on MRI may represent a new specific finding for an uncommon form of meniscal injury known as meniscal avulsion.The presence of a floating meniscus on MRI is a result of significant trauma to the knee leading to meniscal avulsion and is often associated with significant ligamentous injury. Alerting the surgeon to the presence of a meniscal avulsion facilitates appropriate surgical planning with meniscal reattachment to the tibial plateau.

Referência(s)