| Literature DB >> 29782592 |
H K Mohan1, K Strobel2, W van der Bruggen3, G Gnanasegaran4, W U Kampen5, T Kuwert6, T Van den Wyngaert7,8, F Paycha9.
Abstract
A vast spectrum of lower limb bone and joint disorders (hip, knee, ankle, foot) present with a common clinical presentation: limping. Too often this symptom generates an inefficient cascade of imaging studies. This review attempts to optimise the diagnostic effectiveness of bone scintigraphy using the hybrid SPECT/CT technique in relation to the diagnostic clues provided by other imaging modalities, discusses the appropriate clinical indications, optimal scintigraphic procedures and illustrates updated image pattern-oriented reporting. Frequent lower limb bone and joint pathologies that can now be reliably diagnosed using hybrid bone SPECT/CT imaging will be reviewed. Bone SPECT/CT can be an effective problem-solving tool in patients with persistent limping when careful history taking, clinical examination, and first-line imaging modalities fail to identify the underlying cause.Entities:
Keywords: Ankle; Bone scintigraphy; Foot; Hip; Knee; Limping; SPECT/CT
Year: 2018 PMID: 29782592 PMCID: PMC5954706 DOI: 10.1186/s41824-018-0026-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hybrid Imaging ISSN: 2510-3636
Overview of imaging features in potential applications of bone SPECT/CT in the limping patient
| CT features | SPECT features | |
|---|---|---|
| Accessory ossicles | Presence of the accessory ossicle. | Symptomatic ossicles can show increased focal uptake (Chew |
| Ankylosing spondylitis | Erosions, sclerotic changes, subchondral bone changes, and bone formations at ligament insertions (Lacout et al. | Increased uptake at ligament insertions, vertebral bodies; facet and costotransverse/costovertebral joints (Fogelman et al. |
| Arthroplasty/osteosynthesis | Assessment varies according to type of arthroplasty or osteosynthesis. Features associated with pathology include: radiolucent zones (> 2 mm), periprosthetic fractures, endosteal scalloping, hardware breakage, component wear, heterotopic ossification, subluxation, dislocation, or soft-tissue masses or fluid collections (Roth et al. | Increased uptake at the bone-prosthesis interface suggests loosening, depending on implant positioning and fixation zones. Periprosthetic fractures or malunion show increased focal uptake at these sites. Diffuse uptake surrounding fixation screws is suspicious for loosening (Fogelman et al. |
| Avascular necrosis of hip | No abnormalities during early phase. Osteoporosis is the first visible sign, followed by clumping and distortion of the central trabeculae. An adjacent low-density region represents the reparative zone (Stoica et al. | Acute phase: photopenic area. Following restoration of blood flow: intense radiopharmaceutical uptake, indicating repair (Fogelman et al. |
| Benign bone tumors | Appearance varies according to histopathology. Important CT imaging characteristics include location within the bone, lesion margin, matrix proliferation, and periosteal reaction (Motamedi and Seeger | Tracer uptake can be highly variable between lesion types, ranging from poor uptake (e.g. solitary bone cyst, enchondroma), partial rim-shape uptake (e.g. aneurysmal bone cyst), to increased uptake (e.g. fibrous dysplasia, osteoblastoma). Variability within lesion types occurs (e.g. hemangioma) (Fogelman et al. |
| Plantar fasciitis | Bony spur may develop at the plantar aspect of the calcaneus and plantar fascia thickening can be visible (Chew | Focal calcaneal hyperemia on blood pool images, extending into the proximal plantar fascia in more severe disease. Delayed images show focal calcaneal uptake (Frater et al. |
| Femoral acetabular impingement (FAI) | Cam type: non-spherical femoral head or lack of neck concavity. Pincer type: deep or overhanging acetabulum. Labral ossification, joint space narrowing, and osseous hypertrophy of the acetabular rim develop in chronic FAI (Morrison and Sanders | Hyperemia on blood pool images. Delayed images show a “reverse C” pattern of joint uptake. Intense focal uptake in the lateral and inferomedial aspect of the femoral head indicate impingement (Fogelman et al. |
| Heterotopic ossification (HO) | Muscle swelling containing calcification: amorphous (poorly defined with no trabecular structure), immature (initial trabecular formation with poorly defined margins), or mature (well-defined cancellous bone with cortical outline) (Zagarella et al. | Flow and blood pool is positive 2–3 weeks after injury. Delayed images become positive about 1 week later. Peak activity occurs a few months after injury, followed by progressively decreasing uptake with normalization at 6 to 12 months after injury (Shehab et al. |
| Insufficiency/stress fracture | Linear sclerosis possibly with subtle focal cortical interruption or step-off (Morrison and Sanders | Typical appearance is of hyperemia with intense uptake on late images at the site of injury (Fogelman et al. |
| Osteoarthritis | Uneven loss of articular space, subchondral sclerosis, osteophytes, and subchondral cysts. Absence of osteoporosis, ankylosis, and erosions (Chew | Usually no hyperemia. Late images typically show a combination of diffuse articular uptake depending on disease severity, and (multi)focal uptake at the joint edges or weight-bearing surfaces (Boegard et al. |
| Osteochondritis dissecans | Subchondral irregular areas of increased and decreased density, with normal, thinned, or eroded overlying articular cartilage (Bloem and Sartoris | Uptake depends on the age of the lesion. Acute lesions can show subtle focal hyperemia, with more intense delayed uptake at the site of injury (Fogelman et al. |
| Osteoid osteoma | Osteolucent focus at the nidus, with or without a dense central mineralized focus. Surrounding extensive fusiform sclerosis is typical in long bones (Motamedi and Seeger | Typical findings show a vascular lesion on blood pool images and intense focal uptake on the delayed image (Fogelman et al. |
| Spontaneous osteonecrosis of the knee | No changes in early disease. Later, subtle flattening of the condyle develops, followed by appearance of a radiolucent area (crescent or rim sign) indicating segmental necrosis of subchondral bone. | Intense uptake on blood pool and late phase images early after onset for up to 6 months. This is followed by a gradual decrease of blood pool uptake, but persisting positive late phase images for up to 2 years (Elgazzar |
| Tarsal coalition | Abnormal osseous continuity of two bones, or more subtle abnormalities in non-osseous coalitions (joint space narrowing, minimal marginal reactive osseous changes). Subchondral joint cysts can occur in an otherwise non-arthritic appearing foot (Lawrence et al. | Focal uptake at the site of coalition and at any sites complicated by osteoarthritis (Fogelman et al. |
| Tendinopathies | General or localized swelling of the tendon may be observed on CT. When partial rupture has occurred focal intratendinous inhomogeneities with lower attenuation compared to the surrounding tissue become apparent (Kalebo et al. | Increased uptake on the flow and blood pool images (Pelletier-Galarneau et al. |
| Tophaceous gout | Peri-articular rat-bite erosions with overhanging edges. Non-calcified dense soft-tissue tophi. Tendon thickening may occur (Morrison and Sanders | Blood pool and delayed images typically show intense increased uptake in the affected joints (Fogelman et al. |
| Transient osteoporosis | Diffuse osteopenia of the affected area without crescent sign or collapse of the femoral head. | Blood pool and delayed images typically show increased uptake with varying intensity in the femoral head extending into the femoral neck and intertrochanteric region, without focal cold spots (Gemmel et al. |
Fig. 1Imaging algorithm chronic hip pain. Proposed imaging algorithm for chronic hip pain unexplained by clinical examination and history taking
Fig. 2Bone SPECT/CT imaging of the painful hip. Illustration of bone SPECT/CT applications in imaging the painful hip. a femoro-acetabular impingement of the right hip, b subtrochanteric osteoid osteoma of the left femur, c chronic bisphosphonate use induced stress fracture of the left femur, and d avascular necrosis of the femoral head (reparative phase)
Fig. 3Imaging algorithm painful knee arthroplasty. Imaging algorithm for assessing the painful knee arthroplasty using bone SPECT/CT as second-line modality after conventional radiographs. Depending on the differential diagnosis generated by SPECT/CT selected follow-up imaging techniques may be required. Modified from Hirschmann et al. (Hirschmann et al. 2013)
Fig. 4Bone SPECT/CT imaging of the painful knee. Illustration of bone SPECT/CT applications in imaging the painful knee. a medial compartment overloading demonstrated on bone SPECT/CT but not visible on MR STIR imaging, b loosening of arthroplasty due to large granulomas causing only diffuse non-specific uptake on planar imaging (inset), c example of osteochondritis dissecans with a gap surrounding the fragment not visible on MRI, d complex osteosynthesis of the proximal tibia after trauma with pain recurrence due to stress fracture of the distal femur on planar (inset) and SPECT/CT, but unsuspected on anatomical imaging
Fig. 5Imaging algorithm painful foot and ankle. Imaging algorithm for assessing the painful foot and ankle. Modified from Mohan et al. (Mohan et al. 2010)
Fig. 6Bone SPECT/CT imaging of the painful foot/ankle. Illustration of bone SPECT/CT applications in imaging the painful foot and ankle. a degenerative changes in the distal tibiofibular syndesmosis complex after trauma, b partial ankylosis of the right subtalar joint and syndesmosis with subchondral sclerosis of the left subtalar joint in a patient with ankylosing spondylitis, c fasciitis plantaris, d os trigonum syndrome
Summary of causes of referred pain
| Area of pain sensation | Referred pain etiology |
|---|---|
| Knee | Low back |
| Thigh | Low back |
| Low back | Knee |
Fig. 7Bone SPECT/CT imaging of referred pain. Illustration of bone SPECT/CT applications in imaging of conditions associated with referred pain: a degenerative facet joint arthropathy in the segment above spinal fusion, b symptomatic Bertolotti’s syndrome, and focal uptake in the hip where SPECT/CT imaging allows differentiation of c avascular necrosis, d osteoarthritis, and e an osteolytic bone metastasis and soft-tissue component (inset)