Andrea Donovan1, Zehava Sadka Rosenberg. 1. Department of Medical Imaging, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Rm. AG 278, 2075 Bayview Ave., Toronto, ON, Canada M4N 3M5. andrea.donovan@sunnybrook.ca
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this article is to review the pathophysiology and clinical presentation of impingement syndromes at the ankle joint (anterolateral, anterior, anteromedial, posteromedial, and posterior) and the role of MRI in evaluating impingement at the ankle joint and at extraarticular locations, lateral to the ankle joint (talocalcaneal and calcaneofibular). CONCLUSION: MRI is valuable in assessing both osseous and soft-tissue abnormalities associated with impingement syndromes.
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this article is to review the pathophysiology and clinical presentation of impingement syndromes at the ankle joint (anterolateral, anterior, anteromedial, posteromedial, and posterior) and the role of MRI in evaluating impingement at the ankle joint and at extraarticular locations, lateral to the ankle joint (talocalcaneal and calcaneofibular). CONCLUSION: MRI is valuable in assessing both osseous and soft-tissue abnormalities associated with impingement syndromes.
Authors: Anna Hirschmann; Christian W A Pfirrmann; Georg Klammer; Norman Espinosa; Florian M Buck Journal: Eur Radiol Date: 2013-09-26 Impact factor: 5.315
Authors: Alberto Bellelli; Enzo Silvestri; Antonio Barile; Domenico Albano; Alberto Aliprandi; Roberto Caudana; Vito Chianca; Francesco Di Pietto; Carlo Faletti; Eugenio Genovese; Andrea Giovagnoni; Carlo Masciocchi; Carmelo Messina; Luca Maria Sconfienza; Vincenzo Spina; Marcello Zappia Journal: Radiol Med Date: 2019-01-28 Impact factor: 3.469