| Literature DB >> 23021154 |
Florian S Schleich1, Maja Schürch, Martin W Huellner, Urs Hug, Urs von Wartburg, Klaus Strobel, Patrick Veit-Haibach.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Unspecific pain of the hand/wrist is a diagnostic challenge. Radiographs and planar bone scan are useful diagnostic tools in patients with unspecific wrist pain. Both modalities are deficient, either by not presenting metabolic disorders or due to inadequate anatomical resolution. Single photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) claims to fuse both features.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23021154 PMCID: PMC3506557 DOI: 10.1186/2191-219X-2-53
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Res Impact factor: 3.138
Figure 1A 25-year-old male with left-sided wrist pain when grabbing and lifting. Tendinitis was suspected. (A) Plain radiographs showed no bone lesion. (B) SPECT/CT revealed an intense radioisotope uptake in the lunate bone corresponding with osteomalacia of the lunate bone followed by surgery (top row: three-dimensional (3D)-SPECT and fusion SPECT/CT, bottom row: planar SPECT and CT-alone).
Figure 2A 32-year-old female with persistent dorsoradial wrist pain after distortion. (A) No bone lesion was detected on plain radiographs. (B) High radioisotope uptake in the distal radial epiphysis with bumpy RC joint surface, representing persistent bone remodeling after consolidated distal radial fracture (left: 3D-SPECT, right: fusion SPECT/CT). Occupational therapy was initiated after SPECT/CT.
Figure 3A 28-year-old male with suspected RC osteoarthritis after scaphoid fracture 6 years ago. The patient has a consolidated pseudoarthrosis of the scaphoid bone and persistent wrist pain. (A) Plain radiographs show focal sclerosis of the proximal pole of the scaphoid. (B) Planar bone scan revealed uptake in the scaphoid bone on late-phase images (left: early phase, right: late phase). (C) Coronal SPECT/CT images showed uptake in the proximal scaphoid (osseous remodeling) and a vital proximal scaphoid fragment. The patient received revisional osteosynthesis of the scaphoid.
Correlation of clinical and SPECT/CT findings with consecutive therapeutic change
| 1 | Persistent pain after arthroplasty CMC-1 and revision with partial resection of the trapezium bone | Possible persistent osseous reaction after arthroplasty | Significant uptake in MC-1 base and the trapezium bone |
| 4 | Persistent posttraumatic wrist pain 6 months after undislocated radius fracture | Posttraumatic osseous lesion | Persistent posttraumatic reactive bone remodeling at fracture site, no significant osteoarthritis |
| 9 | Unclear pain in CMC-1 with pain, swelling, and redness | Unclear, ganglion cyst (detected in MRI) not correlating with clinical symptoms | Mild uptake in the hamate bone and distal radius, no osteoarthritic changes |
| 10 | Unclear persistent wrist pain and pain in both Dig-I for several years | Osteoarthritis | No significant osteoarthritis, no signs of inflammatory arthritis |
| 11 | Unclear right-sided wrist pain (ulnocarpal) | Unclear, possible insertion tendinosis | No pathologic osseous findings, thus exclusion of possible diagnosis (clinically possible tendinosis) |
| 16 | Unclear pain in right CMC-1, no trauma | Unclear | Uptake in both STT joints, beginning (activated) osteoarthritis |
| 19 | Arthritic right-sided wrist pain, no trauma | Triscaphoid osteoarthritis/possible irritation of the STT joint | Moderate bone remodeling of the right RC and SL joints without significant osteoarthritis, no STT osteoarthritis |
| 20 | Persisting left-sided wrist pain during flexion, no trauma | Unclear | Persisting bone growth, no bony lesion, exclusion of other differential diagnosis |
| 22 | Unclear right-sided radiocarpal wrist pain 1 year after trauma | Posttraumatic osseous/osteoarthritic lesion | Persistent bone remodeling at fracture site |
| 24 | Radiocarpal right-sided pain for more than 1 year, no trauma | Unclear, MRI findings did not explain clinical symptoms | Elevated radiocarpal bone metabolism, together with clinical findings suggestive for tendovaginitis |
| 25 | Carpal pain after scaphoid pseudoarthrosis, CT shows no persisting fracture | Triscaphoid osteoarthritis | Persistent bone remodeling in former fracture zone, no ST uptake but slight stress reaction radio-scaphoidal |
| 29 | Left-sided wrist pain while grabbing and lifting | Tendinitis | Osteomalacia of the lunate bone |
| 34 | Pain in the CMC-1 and MC-1 base, wrist trauma 20 years ago | Osteoarthritis STT joint | Posttraumatic intraosseous ganglion cyst in the right scaphoid |
| 36 | Persistent pain after posttraumatic arthrodesis IP-I | CRPS | Persistent bone remodeling in arthrodesis, osteoarthritis CMC-2 joint, no CRPS |
| 37 | Persitent pain in CMC-1 joints after trapezectomy and right arthroplasty >3 years ago | CMC-1 osteoarthritis | Severely activated CMC-1 osteoarthritis |
| 46 | Pain after scaphoid fracture and consolidated pseudoarthrosis | RC osteoarthritis | No RC osteoarthritis, vital scaphoid fragment with bone remodeling |
| 49 | Persistent pain in the distal ulna after distorsion >8 months ago | Ganglion cyst (diagnosed in MRI) was suspected to cause pain | Reactive elevation of bone metabolism at ulnar styloid (insertion of TFCC), ganglion cyst as the cause of clinical symptoms was excluded |
| 50 | Carpal pain, known radiopalmar ganglion cyst | Possible additional STT osteoarthritis | Activated osteoarthritis in multiple IP and MCP joints, exclusion of STT osteoarthritis |
| 51 | Left-sided carpal pain with painful bump | Carpal boss MCP III with reactive bony lesion and possible additional degenerative joint lesions | Carpal boss MCP-III with osseous reaction |
| Therapy: surgical resection without additional arthrodesis (no additional joint degenerations) |
CMC, carpometacarpal joint; CRPS, complex regional pain syndrome; IP, interphalangeal joint; MC, metacarpal joint; MCP, metacarpophalangeal joint; PIP, proximal interphalangeal joint; RC, radiocarpal joint; STT, scaphoid-trapezium-trapezoideum joint.
Figure 4A 48-year-old female with symptomatic bilateral CMC-1 osteoarthritis. The patient had a history of trapezectomy on the left hand 3 years ago. (A) Plain radiographs showed moderate CMC-1 osteoarthritis on the left side. (B) Intense uptake in the right CMC-1 joint and moderate uptake in the left CMC-1 joint on early-phase imaging (left), intense radioisotope uptake in both CMC-1 joints on late-phase imaging (right). (C) SPECT/CT confirmed activated bilateral rhizarthritis/osteoarthritis with neoarticulation of the MC-1 and trapezoid bone on the right side. Patient received re-arthroplasty (top row: 3D-SPECT and fusion SPECT/CT, bottom row: planar SPECT and CT-alone).