Diagnostic Radiology/Musculoskeletal Imaging/Trauma/Meniscal Cysts

Well-defined cystic lesions located along the peripheral margin of the meniscus, nearly always associated with horizontal meniscal tears.

Etiology
Various etiologies have been proposed, including trauma,hemorrhage, chronic infection, and mucoid degeneration. The most widely accepted theory describes meniscal cysts resulting from extrusion of synovial fluid through a peripherally extended horizontal meniscal tear, accumulating outside the joint capsule. They arise more commonly from the medial joint margin, and occur most often in 20 to 40 year old males.

Signs/Symptoms
Pain and swelling or focal mass at the level of the joint. The pain may be related to a meniscal tear or distension of the knee capsule or both. The mass varies in consistency from soft/fluctuant to hard. Size is variable, and meniscal cysts are known to change in size with knee flexion/extension.

Radiologic Findings
MR imaging is the modality of choice for diagnosis of meniscal cysts. In their most subtle form, meniscal cysts present as focal areas of high signal intensity within a swollen meniscus. It is not uncommon for radiologists to miss this type of meniscal cyst because the signal intensity is not quite as bright as fluid on T2 weighted sequences.2 When this fluid is extruded into the adjacent soft tissues, the swollen meniscus subsequently assumes a more normal shape, and the extruded fluid demonstrates a relatively higher T2 signal typical of parameniscal cysts.



Medial meniscus horizontal tear extending into a meniscal cyst

Sagittal T2 images of a medial meniscus horizontal tear extending into a meniscal cyst





Large medial meniscus cyst

Treatment
Treatment of meniscal cysts consists of a combination of cyst decompression (intraarticular decompression versus open cystectomy) and arthroscopic repair of any meniscal abnormalities. Success rates are significantly higher when both the cyst and meniscal tear are treated compared to treating only one disease process.