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Achillis Tendon Anatomy

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Let's begin our discussion of tendon anatomy, starting

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with the gastroc anemia, soleus continuation

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as the achilles tendon, the achilles tendon.

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And these two constituents are one of the structures that

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produces plantar flex.

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I'm listing some of the other ones here.

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So what is this particular tendon?

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Well, here's a beautiful picture, uh, taken

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by Michael Stadnik, a drawing that he did that shows you,

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in fact, what the achilles tendon is.

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The myo tendons unit

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of the Achilles tendon spans three joints.

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Remember, it spans the knee, the ankle, and the sub joint.

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It represents a continuation, okay,

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of the aosis on the anterior surface of the gastroc

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and the posterior surface of the sous muscle.

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So the tendon forms where they join right here,

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and it extends down to the attachment

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on the postal superior aspect of the calcaneus.

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The literature would tell you that in general, 10

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to 15 centimeters in limp, there is, there is an area

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of tenuous vascularity.

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There's a debate about it,

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but in general it occurs two to six centimeters

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above the level of the calcan attachment.

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We'll talk more about sites of tendon tearing in a moment.

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There is no sheep.

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There is a perin rather than a tend sheet.

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So we do talk about peritonitis more about that term later.

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We do not talk about 10 synovitis,

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and it in fact, uh, will occupy

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and have to absorb major loads during, uh, uh,

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of the body weight here, 12.5 times body weight

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that's placed on the tendon

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during certain activities such as running.

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Now, I wanted to give you an idea of, of

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what these two constituents, gastro and sous do.

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This is a view of the back of the, uh,

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lower leg showing you here, the gastrocnemius muscle

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in yellow, the sous hidden in front

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of the gastrocnemius in red.

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If we did a cross section right here,

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this is what it would look like.

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The amount of sous versus gastroc

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contribution varies, but classically, of course the soleus

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is located here more anteriorly.

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The gastroc is located more posteriorly.

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But as we move down, there is a rotation so lower down.

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As you look at this, you can appreciate that the gastroc

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component is located laterally

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and the soleus component is located medially

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of variable size

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As I'm showing here.

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And that is why as you look at your axial images,

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as you proceed from the top to the bottom,

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you can see in fact the sous contribution

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extending from a lateral to medial direction

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as it joins the gastro uh, contribution.

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And it does produce a slight convexity

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to the anter surface of the tendon.

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I know we're told to look for that convexity

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'cause it's generally indicates pathology,

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but this is the normal focal convexity that occurs

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where the sous joins the gastroc

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to form the achilles tendon.

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And it's of interest as you look at it, you can see

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the attachments of these various components to the

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calt tuberosity, like every tuberosity that I know about.

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It is not smooth. The tuberosity has facets.

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This is the area of the superior facet kind

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of superolateral that's intimate

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with the retrocalcaneal bur, I'll talk more about

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that in a little while.

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As we go to the medial

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or middle facet, we can see medially as we would expect.

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Then the soleus attachment

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and laterally, you can see here the lateral

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head of the gastroc.

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And then below that in the inferior facet, the medial head

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of the gastroc anemia attaches.

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So just like we talked about earlier, uh,

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mini talked about the greater trocanter

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and the facets related to the gluteal tendon.

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All of these tuberosities have facets.

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And this is the anatomy at the site of attachment

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of the calcaneus.

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Now adjacent to the achilles tendon,

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we have the longest tendon in the human body.

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This is the planned terrace tendon

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that starts at the lateral aspect of the, of the knee

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and extends all the way down to the ankle, generally

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attaching to the calcaneus,

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although occasionally to the achilles tendon.

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These are three particular patterns in which you can see the

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attachment of the plantars tendon here

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to the calcaneus here to the achilles tendon.

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This is what it looks like in a, in sagittal images,

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there are reports that if the plantar tendon is thickened,

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if it has tendonosis, there may be a higher risk

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for abnormalities in the adjacent portion

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of the achilles tendon.

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Now, let's look normal sagittal section

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of the achilles tendon attachment.

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Here's a sagittal Mr.

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And I wanna point out

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that normally we have a pre Achilles fat pad

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that sends a sliver

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Of fat just behind the postal superior aspect

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of the calcaneus.

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That when you look at this with conventional radiography

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or as shown here with Mr Imaging, you will see

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that sliver of fat.

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I call this the retro cal calcan recess.

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On a lateral radiograph,

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you see a triangular radiolucent shadow on an mr.

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You see fat signal between the achilles tendon

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and the postal superior surface of the calcaneus.

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Sitting in this area is a bursa, a normal bursa that goes

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by the name of the retro calcan bursa.

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The images on the left represent

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the situation in a cadaver

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where we have injected air into the bursa and distended it

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and then sectioned in a sagittal way.

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That particular region showing you

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that when you distend the bursa, that particular sliver

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of fat is displaced superiorly away from the back

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of the calcaneus.

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Here is kind of what it would look like. Diagrammatically.

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Here is what retro calcan bursitis looks like

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with reactive edema in the calcaneus tendinosis,

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superficial bursitis as well.

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So this is retro calcaneal bursitis.

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There are a number of accessory muscles.

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I'm not gonna be able to cover all of them.

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I will cover a few during this lecture.

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This is the accessory sous muscle, typically superficial

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to the flexor ret macular.

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In most of the cases, not all it attaches

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to the calcaneus shown here.

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The sous muscle, in some cases

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extends further down than the level

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of the ankle joint shown here.

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This is a low lying sous insertion, right,

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but the main fong finding the accessory sous muscle.

Report

Faculty

Donald Resnick, MD

Professor Emeritus, Department of Radiology

University of California, San Diego

Christine B. Chung, MD

Professor of Radiology, Executive Vice Chair, and Director of UCSD MSK Imaging Research Lab

UC San Diego

Karen Y. Cheng, MD

Assistant Professor of Clinical Radiology

University of California, San Diego

Tags

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Foot & Ankle