| Literature DB >> 29631610 |
P Collado1, D Windschall2, J Vojinovic3, S Magni-Manzoni4, P Balint5, G A W Bruyn6, C Hernandez-Diaz7, J C Nieto8, V Ravagnani9, N Tzaribachev10, A Iagnocco11, M A D'Agostino12, E Naredo13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recently preliminary ultrasonography (US) definitions, in B mode, for normal components of pediatric joints have been developed by the OMERACT US group. The aim of the current study was to include Doppler findings in the evaluation and definition of normal joint features that can be visualized in healthy children at different age groups.Entities:
Keywords: Joint anatomy; Pediatric rheumatology; Power-Doppler; Ultrasonography
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29631610 PMCID: PMC5892017 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-018-0240-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Fig. 1US images show normal anatomy of the knee joint. The upper images (a, b). We see the distal epiphyseal end of the femur with its secondary ossification centre (asterisk). Note a physiological vessel (arrow) in the epiphyseal cartilage of the femoral condyle (a) and in the quadriceps fat pad (b). Every vessel should be proved in longitudinal (c) and transverse view (d)
Fig. 2Longitudinal dorsal view of a healthy ankle joint. The US image shows the location of intracapsular but extrasynovial fatty tissue, the presence of physis and epiphyseal cartilage in distal end of the tibia (*). 2nd oc: secondary ossification centre of the tibia
Fig. 3Midsagittal plane of the knee joint a 5-year-old healthy boy. The image shows physiologic joint vascularity (arrow head) located in the quadriceps fat pad (arrow)
Final statements and group agreement (percentage agreement) achieved for each statement of the second round
| N. | Definition Statement | Percentage agreement, % |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Physiological vascularity can be detected by PD as Doppler signal in the joint structures at any age during growth | 100 |
| 2 | Physiological intraarticular vascularity can be detected in children within the fat pads and unossified joint structures (i.e., the physis, the cartilage of epiphysis and the short bones cartilage) | 85.7 |
| 3 | Detection of physiological vascularity and its intraarticular anatomical position is joint and age (particularly in the youngest children) dependent | 85.7 |
| 4 | Physis can be detected in children as an anechoic unossified structure, intra- or extra-articular according to its anatomical location | 85.7 |
| 5 | Fat pad can be detected as an intra-articular structure with heterogeneous echotexture (similar to the subcutaneous tissue) which might show vascularity | 92.9 |
| 6 | In different age groups of children, due to the skeletal development, ossification centers can be detected with different maturation state | 100 |
| 7 | Ossification grade is age and joint dependent | 92.9 |
Fig. 4Longitudinal view of the dorsal aspect of the wrist joint in a 6-year-old child. The upper images (a, b) show the normal sonoanatomy on Grey-scale US (a) and power-Doppler US (b) showing single vessels close to os capitate. The lower images (c, d, e) show synovitis of the wrist joint in a patient with JIA. Synovial vascularity detected in the joint recesses by Doppler (image d, power Doppler and image e, color Doppler) reflects active inflammation. The distal epiphyseal cartilage of radius (er) is visible as an anechoic structure surrounding the secondary ossification nucleus (*). Dynamic examination let distinguish the epiphyseal cartilage of radius from effusion/synovitis (syn)