Make PPT of MRI Knee joint anatomy in detailed with images
MRI knee joint anatomy axial sagittal coronal
knee MRI meniscus cruciate ligament anatomy labeled
knee MRI patella femur tibia fibula cartilage bursa anatomy
~/MRI_Knee_Joint_Anatomy_PPT.html
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<title>MRI Knee Joint Anatomy - Detailed Presentation</title>
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<h1>MRI Knee Joint Anatomy</h1>
<h3>Detailed Teaching Presentation</h3>
<p><strong>Focus:</strong> systematic understanding of knee structures on MRI in axial, sagittal, and coronal planes.</p>
<div>
<span class="tag">Musculoskeletal MRI</span>
<span class="tag">Normal anatomy</span>
<span class="tag">Menisci</span>
<span class="tag">Ligaments</span>
<span class="tag">Cartilage</span>
<span class="tag">Plane-based interpretation</span>
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<div class="img-box" style="max-width:760px;">
<img src="https://cdn.orris.care/cdss_images/pmc_clinical_VQA_922a769e6a42529df50e805d450673f87c7861edba0704f528ed85ca7168aedb.jpg" alt="Multiplanar knee MRI anatomy overview" />
<div class="caption">Multiplanar segmentation-oriented view of knee anatomy across axial, sagittal and coronal planes.</div>
</div>
<div class="footer">Prepared for educational use. Correlate MRI findings with clinical context and institutional protocols.</div>
</section>
<section class="slide">
<h2>Slide 1: MRI Planes and Orientation</h2>
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<div class="col">
<h3>Standard MRI planes</h3>
<ul>
<li><strong>Sagittal:</strong> best for ACL, PCL, patellar tendon, Hoffa fat pad, meniscal horns.</li>
<li><strong>Coronal:</strong> best for collateral ligaments, meniscal body, femorotibial compartments.</li>
<li><strong>Axial:</strong> best for patellofemoral articulation, retinacula, trochlear groove, transverse anatomy.</li>
</ul>
<h3>Typical sequences used for anatomy</h3>
<ul>
<li>T1-weighted: marrow and anatomy detail.</li>
<li>Proton density (PD): excellent structural delineation.</li>
<li>PD fat-sat / T2 fat-sat: fluid-sensitive, useful for associated pathology.</li>
</ul>
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<img src="https://cdn.orris.care/cdss_images/pmc_clinical_VQA_8d657d8e21b8af85d10f103f2467f6cb883a55572e888d75004aa42e133e0dbe.jpg" alt="Knee MRI axial coronal sagittal views" />
<div class="caption">Axial, coronal and sagittal MRI views showing key orientation landmarks.</div>
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</section>
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<h2>Slide 2: Osseous Anatomy on MRI</h2>
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<ul>
<li><strong>Distal femur:</strong> medial and lateral condyles, intercondylar notch.</li>
<li><strong>Proximal tibia:</strong> medial/lateral tibial plateau, tibial spines (eminence).</li>
<li><strong>Patella:</strong> anterior sesamoid bone articulating with trochlea.</li>
<li><strong>Fibular head:</strong> lateral landmark, relation to biceps femoris and LCL complex.</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>MRI appearance:</strong> cortical bone is low signal (dark), marrow signal varies by sequence.</p>
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<img src="https://cdn.orris.care/cdss_images/pmc_clinical_VQA_12f5f2825b069a6a61547df00db80f954f15544163d656b4e3319c1daa448e4b.jpg" alt="Sagittal knee MRI showing femur tibia patella" />
<div class="caption">Sagittal anatomy: femur, tibia, patella and marrow/cortex contrast.</div>
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</section>
<section class="slide">
<h2>Slide 3: Meniscal Anatomy</h2>
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<ul>
<li>Medial and lateral menisci are fibrocartilaginous wedges between femur and tibia.</li>
<li>Functions: load transmission, joint stability, shock absorption, lubrication.</li>
<li><strong>Normal MRI:</strong> homogeneous low-signal triangular structure on sagittal/coronal images.</li>
<li>Identify anterior horn, body, posterior horn and root attachments.</li>
</ul>
<p class="small">Meniscal roots are crucial to mention in advanced anatomy teaching due to biomechanical significance.</p>
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<img src="https://cdn.orris.care/cdss_images/pmc_clinical_VQA_ea0489a55093518c0a2c324bfd1a6d2450165a4443b7da3e8634c32d557b39ae.jpg" alt="Coronal and axial MRI meniscus anatomy" />
<div class="caption">Meniscal morphology and root region localization on axial/coronal MRI.</div>
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</section>
<section class="slide">
<h2>Slide 4: Cruciate Ligaments (ACL and PCL)</h2>
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<ul>
<li><strong>ACL:</strong> courses from anterior tibial spine to lateral femoral condyle.</li>
<li><strong>PCL:</strong> thicker structure from posterior tibial plateau to medial femoral condyle.</li>
<li>Best assessed on sagittal and coronal oblique planes.</li>
<li><strong>Normal MRI:</strong> low-signal continuous fiber bundles.</li>
</ul>
<p>Include insertion anatomy and relationship with intercondylar notch in teaching sessions.</p>
</div>
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<img src="https://cdn.orris.care/cdss_images/pmc_clinical_VQA_5e64a5ad7e61d385be7e32e7ceb1b1b4966f7be5b6ab583c81d495636fa179ae.jpg" alt="Sagittal MRI ACL and PCL anatomy" />
<div class="caption">Sagittal demonstration of cruciate ligament anatomy and orientation.</div>
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<h2>Slide 5: Collateral Ligaments and Posterolateral Corner</h2>
<ul>
<li><strong>MCL:</strong> broad medial stabilizer, superficial and deep components.</li>
<li><strong>LCL:</strong> cord-like lateral stabilizer extending to fibular head.</li>
<li>Posterolateral corner includes popliteus tendon complex and supporting stabilizers.</li>
<li>Best visualized in coronal and axial images with supplementary sagittal assessment.</li>
</ul>
<div class="img-box" style="max-width:720px;">
<img src="https://cdn.orris.care/cdss_images/BAILY_1760541033912_7b187248-9ac6-43bc-b1e3-cb9b69fb20b9.png" alt="Labeled knee ligament anatomy illustration" />
<div class="caption">Labeled ligamentous anatomy for correlation with MRI planes.</div>
</div>
</section>
<section class="slide">
<h2>Slide 6: Patellofemoral Joint and Extensor Mechanism</h2>
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<ul>
<li>Components: quadriceps tendon, patella, patellar tendon, trochlear groove.</li>
<li>Retinacula stabilize patellar tracking (medial and lateral).</li>
<li>Cartilage of patella and trochlea should be assessed for thickness and surface smoothness.</li>
<li>Suprapatellar recess and Hoffa fat pad are key soft-tissue landmarks.</li>
</ul>
</div>
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<img src="https://cdn.orris.care/cdss_images/pmc_clinical_VQA_ceac011cd4ab4ad1cac9a7141fa1b523a1e9537c8bd2885226ca00b7a378a52f.jpg" alt="Sagittal patellofemoral MRI anatomy" />
<div class="caption">Patellofemoral compartment and extensor mechanism landmarks on sagittal MRI.</div>
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<h2>Slide 7: Articular Cartilage, Synovium, Bursae, Fat Pads</h2>
<ul>
<li><strong>Articular cartilage:</strong> covers femoral condyles, tibial plateau, and patella.</li>
<li><strong>Synovium and joint recesses:</strong> suprapatellar, central and posterior compartments.</li>
<li><strong>Bursae:</strong> prepatellar, superficial/deep infrapatellar, pes anserine (regional relevance).</li>
<li><strong>Fat pads:</strong> Hoffa (infrapatellar) and prefemoral fat pads as orientation guides.</li>
</ul>
<div class="img-box" style="max-width:720px;">
<img src="https://cdn.orris.care/cdss_images/pmc_clinical_VQA_34f49d53d6ee7d6f379d71e20b8cc091fa971e5632739062970cf495815b24cb.jpg" alt="Sagittal MRI showing bursa and soft tissue knee landmarks" />
<div class="caption">Fluid-sensitive sagittal MRI demonstrating synovial recesses and soft tissue interfaces.</div>
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</section>
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<h2>Slide 8: Systematic MRI Knee Anatomy Reporting Template</h2>
<ol>
<li>Alignment and osseous contours (femur, tibia, fibula, patella).</li>
<li>Medial and lateral compartments: cartilage + menisci (horns and roots).</li>
<li>Cruciate ligaments and collateral ligament complexes.</li>
<li>Extensor mechanism and patellofemoral articulation.</li>
<li>Synovium, bursae, recesses, fat pads, and neurovascular-adjacent structures.</li>
<li>Conclude with normal anatomy summary or correlate abnormalities if present.</li>
</ol>
<p><strong>Teaching pearl:</strong> Always correlate each structure across at least two orthogonal planes before final interpretation.</p>
<div class="footer">Image sources used: medical literature image search results integrated for educational presentation.</div>
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