Nele Herregods1, Lennart B O Jans2, Min Chen2, Joel Paschke3, Stefanie L De Buyser4, Thomas Renson5, Joke Dehoorne5, Rik Joos5, Robert G W Lambert6,7, Jacob L Jaremko6,7. 1. Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Ghent University Hospital, C. Heymanslaan 10, 9000, Gent, Belgium. Nele.Herregods@uzgent.be. 2. Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Ghent University Hospital, C. Heymanslaan 10, 9000, Gent, Belgium. 3. CARE ARTHRITIS LTD., Unit 210, 316 Windermere Rd NW, Edmonton, Alberta, T6W 2Z8, Canada. 4. Biostatistics Unit, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent University, C. Heymanslaan 10, 9000, Gent, Belgium. 5. Department of Pediatric Rheumatology, Ghent University Hospital, C. Heymanslaan 10, 9000, Gent, Belgium. 6. Department of Radiology & Diagnostic Imaging, University of Alberta, 8440-112 Street, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2B7, Canada. 7. Medical Imaging Consultants, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To determine patterns of variation of subchondral T2 signal changes in pediatric sacroiliac joints (SIJ) by location, age, sex, and sacral apophyseal closure. METHODS: MRI of 502 SIJ in 251 children (132 girls), mean age 12.4 years (range 6.1-18.0), was obtained with parental informed consent. One hundred twenty-seven out of 251 had asymptomatic joints and were imaged for non-rheumatologic reasons, and 124 had low back pain but no sign of sacroiliitis on initial clinical MRI review. After calibration, three subspecialist radiologists independently scored subchondral signal changes on fat-suppressed fluid-sensitive sequences from 0 to 3 in 4 locations, and graded the degree of closure of sacral segmental apophyses. Associations between patient age, sex, signal changes, and apophyseal closure were analyzed. RESULTS: Rim-like subchondral increased T2 signal or "flaring" was much more common at sacral than iliac SIJ margins (72% vs 16%, p < 0.001) and was symmetrical in > 90% of children. Iliac flaring scores were always lower than sacral, except for 1 child. Signal changes decreased as sacral apophyses closed, and were seen in < 20% of subjects with fully closed apophyses. Signal changes were more frequent in boys, and peaked in intensity later than for girls (ages 8-12 vs. 7-10). Subchondral signal in iliac crests was high throughout childhood and did not correlate with other locations. CONCLUSIONS: Subchondral T2 "flaring" is common at SIJ of prepubertal children and is generally sacral-predominant and symmetrical. Flaring that is asymmetrical, greater in ilium than sacrum, or intense in a teenager with closed apophyses, is unusual for normal children and raises concern for pathologic bone marrow edema. KEY POINTS: • A rim of subchondral high T2 signal is commonly observed on MRI at pediatric sacroiliac joints, primarily on the sacral side before segmental apophyseal closure, and should not be confused with pathology. • Unlike subchondral signal changes elsewhere, high T2 signal underlying the iliac crest apophyses is a near-universal normal finding in children that usually persists throughout adolescence. • The following patterns are unusual in normal children and are suspicious for pathology: definite iliac flaring, iliac flaring more intense than sacral flaring, left-right difference in flaring, definite flaring of any pattern in teenagers after sacral apophyseal closure.
OBJECTIVES: To determine patterns of variation of subchondral T2 signal changes in pediatric sacroiliac joints (SIJ) by location, age, sex, and sacral apophyseal closure. METHODS: MRI of 502 SIJ in 251 children (132 girls), mean age 12.4 years (range 6.1-18.0), was obtained with parental informed consent. One hundred twenty-seven out of 251 had asymptomatic joints and were imaged for non-rheumatologic reasons, and 124 had low back pain but no sign of sacroiliitis on initial clinical MRI review. After calibration, three subspecialist radiologists independently scored subchondral signal changes on fat-suppressed fluid-sensitive sequences from 0 to 3 in 4 locations, and graded the degree of closure of sacral segmental apophyses. Associations between patient age, sex, signal changes, and apophyseal closure were analyzed. RESULTS: Rim-like subchondral increased T2 signal or "flaring" was much more common at sacral than iliac SIJ margins (72% vs 16%, p < 0.001) and was symmetrical in > 90% of children. Iliac flaring scores were always lower than sacral, except for 1 child. Signal changes decreased as sacral apophyses closed, and were seen in < 20% of subjects with fully closed apophyses. Signal changes were more frequent in boys, and peaked in intensity later than for girls (ages 8-12 vs. 7-10). Subchondral signal in iliac crests was high throughout childhood and did not correlate with other locations. CONCLUSIONS: Subchondral T2 "flaring" is common at SIJ of prepubertal children and is generally sacral-predominant and symmetrical. Flaring that is asymmetrical, greater in ilium than sacrum, or intense in a teenager with closed apophyses, is unusual for normal children and raises concern for pathologic bone marrow edema. KEY POINTS: • A rim of subchondral high T2 signal is commonly observed on MRI at pediatric sacroiliac joints, primarily on the sacral side before segmental apophyseal closure, and should not be confused with pathology. • Unlike subchondral signal changes elsewhere, high T2 signal underlying the iliac crest apophyses is a near-universal normal finding in children that usually persists throughout adolescence. • The following patterns are unusual in normal children and are suspicious for pathology: definite iliac flaring, iliac flaring more intense than sacral flaring, left-right difference in flaring, definite flaring of any pattern in teenagers after sacral apophyseal closure.
Authors: N Herregods; J Dehoorne; R Joos; J L Jaremko; X Baraliakos; A Leus; F Van den Bosch; K Verstraete; L Jans Journal: Clin Radiol Date: 2015-10-23 Impact factor: 2.350
Authors: M Bollow; J Braun; J Kannenberg; T Biedermann; C Schauer-Petrowskaja; S Paris; S Mutze; B Hamm Journal: Skeletal Radiol Date: 1997-12 Impact factor: 2.199
Authors: N Herregods; J L Jaremko; X Baraliakos; J Dehoorne; A Leus; K Verstraete; L Jans Journal: Skeletal Radiol Date: 2015-07-24 Impact factor: 2.199
Authors: Robert G W Lambert; Pauline A C Bakker; Désirée van der Heijde; Ulrich Weber; Martin Rudwaleit; K G Hermann; Joachim Sieper; Xenofon Baraliakos; Alex Bennett; Jürgen Braun; Rubén Burgos-Vargas; Maxime Dougados; Susanne Juhl Pedersen; Anne Grethe Jurik; Walter P Maksymowych; Helena Marzo-Ortega; Mikkel Østergaard; Denis Poddubnyy; Monique Reijnierse; Filip van den Bosch; Irene van der Horst-Bruinsma; Robert Landewé Journal: Ann Rheum Dis Date: 2016-01-14 Impact factor: 19.103
Authors: N Herregods; J Dehoorne; E Pattyn; J L Jaremko; X Baraliakos; D Elewaut; J Van Vlaenderen; F Van den Bosch; R Joos; K Verstraete; L Jans Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J Date: 2015-11-10 Impact factor: 3.054