Literature DB >> 15208100

Meniscal tears: role of axial MRI alone and in combination with other imaging planes.

Nefise Cagla Tarhan1, Christine B Chung, Aurea Valeria Rosa Mohana-Borges, Tudor Hughes, Donald Resnick.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to determine the reliability of standard axial MR images alone in the diagnosis of meniscal tears of the knee and in combination with other imaging planes.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty-two patients (55 men, seven women; age range, 23-68 years) with a prior MRI examination who underwent arthroscopic surgery of the knee during a 1-year period were included in the study group. Images were independently reviewed for identification of meniscal tears by two musculoskeletal radiologists blinded to arthroscopic findings. Sequences for meniscal evaluation included axial fat-saturated fast spin-echo proton density, coronal fat-saturated fast spin-echo proton density, and sagittal fast spin-echo proton density with 4- to 5-mm slice thicknesses. Imaging groups for evaluation were axial, coronal, sagittal, axial and sagittal, axial and coronal, and coronal and sagittal. Observers reported a confidence level for the presence or absence of meniscal tear in all imaging groups based on a 5-point scale. Statistical analysis considered medial and lateral menisci separately.
RESULTS: Forty patients had medial meniscal tears, and 16 had lateral meniscal tears at arthroscopy. For medial and lateral meniscal tears, the accuracy (79% and 71%, respectively) of imaging in the axial plane was comparable to other imaging groups but the mean confidence levels (2.82 and 3.00, respectively) were low. In one patient, the axial plane alone correctly showed that no tear was present. No statistically significant difference was observed between imaging plane groups of both menisci in the diagnosis of meniscal tears (p > 0.05). The axial plane increased the accuracy of sagittal and coronal planes of lateral meniscus when combined.
CONCLUSION: In standard knee MRI examinations, the axial imaging plane may be valuable for the detection and characterization of meniscal tears.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15208100     DOI: 10.2214/ajr.183.1.1830009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AJR Am J Roentgenol        ISSN: 0361-803X            Impact factor:   3.959


  18 in total

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2.  Proton density-weighted MR imaging of the knee: fat suppression versus without fat suppression.

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3.  [Value of three-dimensional ultrasound and MRI in meniscal lesions].

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4.  MR imaging of the knee in patients with medial unicompartmental arthroplasty: comparison among sequences at 1.5 T.

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5.  Contribution of thin-slice (1 mm) axial proton density MR images for identification and classification of meniscal tears: correlative study with arthroscopy.

Authors:  G Gökalp; O F Nas; B Demirag; Z Yazici; G Savci
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6.  The relationship between prevalent medial meniscal intrasubstance signal changes and incident medial meniscal tears in women over a 1-year period assessed with 3.0 T MRI.

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Review 8.  Meniscus pathology, osteoarthritis and the treatment controversy.

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Review 10.  Conventional and ultrashort time-to-echo magnetic resonance imaging of articular cartilage, meniscus, and intervertebral disk.

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