| Literature DB >> 31949340 |
Luca Saba1,2, Massimo De Filippo3, Francesco Saba4, Federica Fellini5, Pierre-Yves Marcy1,2, Robert Dagan1,2, Philippe Voituriez1,2, Jacques Aelvoet1,2, Gérard Klotz1,2, Roland Bernard1,2, Valérie Salinesi1,2, Serge Agostini1,2.
Abstract
AIMS: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of the Dual Energy Computed Tomography (DECT) in the research of the bone marrow edema. METHODS AND MATERIAL: The MRI images of 100 patients with episodes of articular and or bone pains with or without traumatic lesion were prospectively evaluated during a period between March 2018 and February 2019. In the presence of bone marrow edema, a DECT was performed. The measurement of the density of the bone marrow edema in the DECT was compared with healthy bone in the same patient by two operators. RESULT: The DECT and MRI images of 15 patients with bone marrow edema were compared. The mean of pathologic bone marrow edema was 1008.20 (Standard Deviation (SD) 23.00), for healthy bone marrow 947.53 (SD 16.42), and t = 11.75, with a statistical significance P < 0.05 (Statistical significance 95%). The agreement between the measurements of the two radiologists has a statistical significance (P < 0.05).Entities:
Keywords: Bone marrow edema; dual energy CT; magnetic resonance imaging
Year: 2019 PMID: 31949340 PMCID: PMC6958873 DOI: 10.4103/ijri.IJRI_243_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Radiol Imaging ISSN: 0970-2016
Discrepancy between density measurements made in healthy and pathological bone marrow of the 15 patients by the two operators; each radiologist made a measurement of the density of the pathological bone marrow edema (blue) of each patient and one on the healthy bone (orange) of the same patient as a control, for a total of four measurements for each patient (15 + 15 into the bone marrow edema et 15 + 15 into the healthy bon e marrow)
Figure 1 (A-D)Bone marrow edema in a recent vertebral fracture well visible in the MRI T2 weighted image with Fat Sat (A, arrow). The CT Images confirm the presence of the fracture (B); highlighting the distribution of water with Spectral CT, we observe the presence of bone marrow edema superimposable to MRI (C and D, arrow)
Figure 2 (A-D)Presence of fibular algodystrophy in nonrecent fracture outcomes, well visible in the MRI T2 weighted image with Fat Sat, with bone marrow edema (A, arrow). In the CT images, a minimal postfracture degenerative alteration is observed (B); highlighting the distribution of water with Spectral CT, we observe the presence of bone marrow edema superimposable to MRI (C and D, arrow)
Figure 3 (A and C)A 38-year-old patient comes to our emergency service after a recent trauma. The CT images show a fracture of the anterior calcaneal joint (A); in the Spectral CT, we note the presence of consequent bone marrow edema (B and C, arrow)