| Literature DB >> 26907862 |
Andrew G Georgiadis1, Mark A Seeley1, Nancy A Chauvin2, Wudbhav N Sankar3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a sensitive, non-invasive modality to diagnose acetabular labral pathology, and the normal variants of the acetabular labrum have been characterized in adults. However, the prevalence of labral pathology in the asymptomatic pediatric population is unknown.Entities:
Keywords: Acetabular labral tears; MRI labrum; Pediatric acetabular labrum
Year: 2016 PMID: 26907862 PMCID: PMC4837174 DOI: 10.1007/s11832-016-0717-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Orthop ISSN: 1863-2521 Impact factor: 1.548
Fig. 1Flow diagram detailing the pilot study establishing pelvic MRI for the study protocol, and establishment of the study group after exclusions
Fig. 2Consecutive sagittal T2-weighted fat-saturated images of an 11-year-old boy who underwent MRI of the pelvis for possible inflammatory bowel disease. a Image of the right hip demonstrates abnormal fluid signal extending along the base of the labrum at the labral–cartilaginous junction (arrow). b There is an abnormal thin band of fluid signal or cleft extending along the anterosuperior aspect of the labrum consistent with tear. c Abnormal intrasubstance signal is noted within the labrum (arrow). d Normal appearance of the left hip and labrum (solid arrow). A trace amount of physiologic fluid is noted (dashed arrow)
Fig. 3Age distribution of asymptomatic patients undergoing MRI of the pelvis after exclusions for technical inadequacy
Studies of asymptomatic labral tear rates by non-contrast MRI protocols
| References | Pts | Hips | Labral tears | Age (years) | Field strength | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reichenbach et al. [ | 244 | 244 | 175 (72) | 19.9 | 1.5-T | Swiss military recruits, excluded <18 years |
| Silvis et al. [ | 39 | 78 | 22 (28) | NR | 3.0-T | College/pro hockey players, used both pelvic and bilateral hip MRI |
| Schmitz et al. [ | 42 | 42 | 34 (81) | 27–42 | 1.5-T | Active-duty Air Force volunteers |
| Lee et al. [ | 70 | 140 | 27 (19.2) | 19–41 | 3.0-T | Medical student and allied health professional volunteers |
NB: all studies include young adults but no pediatric patients
NR Not reported