| Literature DB >> 31501959 |
Zlatan Alagic1,2, Robert Bujila3,4, Anders Enocson5, Subhash Srivastava6, Seppo K Koskinen6,7.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to assess if ultra-low-dose CT is a useful clinical alternative to digital radiographs in the evaluation of acute wrist and ankle fractures.Entities:
Keywords: Ankle injuries/treatment; Emergency radiology; Low-dose CT; Multidetector CT; Radiography; Trauma; Wrist injuries/treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 31501959 PMCID: PMC7021773 DOI: 10.1007/s00256-019-03309-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Skeletal Radiol ISSN: 0364-2348 Impact factor: 2.199
Exposure parameters of the Revolution™ CT and the radiography systems
| Revolution™ CT | Discovery™ XR650/ FDR200 AcSelerate™ | |
|---|---|---|
| Scan mode | Axial | Projection |
| Scan field of view | Small body | Variable |
| Tube potential | 120 kV | 50–70 kV |
| Tube current | 10 mA | 5–20 mA |
| ASIR-V level | 70% | – |
| Detector coverage | 160 mm | – |
| Number of rotations | 1 | – |
| Rotation time | 0.28 s | – |
| Slice thickness | 0.625 mm | – |
| Overlap | 0.3125 mm | – |
| Hi-res mode | On | – |
| Reconstruction algorithm | HD detail | – |
| Number of images obtained | 512 | – |
kV kilovolts, mA milliampere, ASIR-V adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction-V
Fig. 1A 28-year-old female fell 2 m from a ladder and landed on her left foot. She presents to the ER unable to bear weight and with pressure pain over tarsals and base of metatarsals. DR AP and AP oblique were negative for fractures (a, b). ULD-CT demonstrates an avulsion fracture from the plantar aspect of the base of the 2nd metatarsal corresponding to the attachment of the plantar component of the Lisfranc ligament (arrows, c and d), making this a nondisplaced Lisfranc injury. The “fleck sign” is obvious on the oblique coronal ULD-CT image (arrow, d). The treatment recommendation was upgraded from functional to cast immobilization after ULD-CT
Fig. 2A 29-year-old male fell on an outstretched hand during soccer practice. He experienced instant sharp wrist pain. He presents to the ER with swelling, limited mobility, and local tenderness in the anatomical snuffbox. DR scaphoid projections show no signs of fracture (a, b). Subsequent ULD-CT demonstrates a nondisplaced scaphoid waist fracture (c). The treatment recommendation was upgraded from functional to cast immobilization
Additional diagnostic information provided by ULD-CT
| Detects an acute fx where DR could not | 36 cases (17.4%) |
| Additional fx-related findings | 33 cases (15.9%): |
| • 22 cases of additional fractures | |
| • 9 cases of articular involvement | |
| • 1 case of increased scapholunar distance | |
| • 1 case of scaphoid subluxation | |
| Confirmed or ruled out a suspected fx on DR | 19 cases (9.2%): |
| • 10 ruled out fx | |
| • 9 confirmed fx | |
| Ruled out a reported fx on DR | 2 cases (1.0%) |
| Differentiated between an acute/old fx where DR could not | 4 cases (1.9%): |
| • 3 confirmed acute fx | |
| • 1 confirmed old fx | |
| Soft tissue info | 6 cases (2.9%): |
| • 2 cases of potential tendon entrapment | |
| • 1 case of calcifications within the peroneus longus tendon | |
| • 1 case of chronic rupture of the peroneus longus tendon | |
| • 1 case of possible pyrophosphate arthropathy | |
| • 1 case of flexor hallucis longus tenosynovitis | |
| Acute fx with additional significant non-acute-fx-related findings | 3 cases (1.4%): |
| • 2 cases of older intraarticular loose bodies in the talocrural joint | |
| • 1 case of chronic osteochondral injury of the talar dome with incipient arthritis of the talocrural joint | |
| Non-acute-fx-related findings that could explain the patient’s symptoms | 9 cases (4.3%): |
| • 3 cases of radiocarpal arthritis | |
| • 1 case of a loose body in the talocrural joint with incipient arthritis | |
| • 1 case of chronic osteochondral injury of the tibia plafond | |
| • 1 case of subluxation of the MCP-2 joint | |
| • 1 case of an old avulsion of the base of the scaphoid with increased scapholunate interval | |
| • 1 case of old fx of the lunate with non-union as well as old fractures of the capitate and hamate with suspected DISI | |
| • 1 case of chronic osteochondral injury of the talar dome |
fx fracture, DR digital radiography, MCP metacarpophalangeal, DISI dorsal intercalated segmental instability
Fig. 3A 31-year-old male that runs several times per week presented to the ER. The same day he experienced a sudden pain in the left ankle and he denies trauma. The left ankle is swollen with limited mobility. The patient is unable to bear weight. Initial DR mortise view and lateral showed signs of early talocrural arthritis with osteophytes surrounding the joint (arrowheads, a and b) as well as a joint effusion (arrows, b). Subsequent ULD-CT demonstrates a 7-mm loose body in the posterior aspect of the talocrural joint (arrows, c and d). The treatment recommendation was upgraded from functional to surgery for removal of the loose intraarticular body
Recommended treatment changes after ULD-CT
| Number of extremities | Treatment before ULD-CT | Treatment after ULD-CT |
|---|---|---|
| 24 | Functional* | Cast immobilization |
| 2 | Functional* | Surgery |
| 1 | Cast immobilization | Surgery |
| 7 | Cast immobilization | Functional* |
* Functional = compression band