Description
An 86-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with diffuse left knee pain from a fall from standing height. Anteroposterior and lateral X-ray of the left knee revealed no evidence of a fracture (figure 1A). However, MRI study revealed left tibial plateau fracture (coronal T2-weighted fast field echo imaging (figure 1B) and coronal proton density-weighted fast spin echo imaging (figure 1C). She was hospitalised for severe left knee pain and was given restrictions on weight-bearing activity for 2 weeks. She achieved good functional outcomes at a 6-month follow-up.
Figure 1
(A) An anteroposterior projection of left knee demonstrated no evidence of fracture. (B) MRI (coronal T2-weighted fast field echo imaging) revealed left tibial plateau fracture. (C) MRI (coronal proton density-weighted fast spin echo imaging) revealed left tibial plateau fracture.
Occult tibial plateau fractures are not be easily diagnosed...
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