| Literature DB >> 34081270 |
Marcello Zappia1,2, Luca Maria Sconfienza3,4, Salvatore Guarino5, Michele Tumminello6, Germano Iannella7, Pier Paolo Mariani7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The posteromedial meniscal region is gaining interest among orthopedic surgeons, as lesions of this area has been reported to be significantly associated with anterior cruciate ligament tears. The current imaging literature is unclear.Entities:
Keywords: ACL injuries; Anatomy; Arthroscopy; MRI; Meniscus
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34081270 PMCID: PMC8292249 DOI: 10.1007/s11547-021-01375-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Med ISSN: 0033-8362 Impact factor: 3.469
Fig. 1a–d Drawing a PDw fat sat sagittal b and coronal c MR images and T1w MR-arthrography image show the ramp capsule (white arrows) forming the floor of the superior posteromedial recess (black asterisks). The meniscotibial (or coronary) ligament (white arrowheads) forms the roof of a second and different recess that we have called the inferior posteromedial recess (black hashtags). A small and extra-articular fat pad is present posteriorly to both recesses (white asterisk)
Fig. 2Sagittal T1w MR-Arthrography image. With knee flexed at 90° the deflexed ramp capsule (arrows) and a wide SPM recess (asterisks) can be noted as well as arthroscopy and IPM appears collapsed. SPM – Superomedial recess; IPM – Inferomedial recess
Fig. 3a–d Drawing a, PDw fat sat sagittal b and coronal c MR and arthroscopy d images of the same patient, show the ramp area lesion (arrows). The meniscotibial ligament appears intact (arrowheads)
Fig. 4a–c Drawing a, PDw fat sat sagittal MR b and arthroscopy c images of the same patient, show a wide ramp lesion (arrows). The meniscotibial ligament appears avulsed (arrowheads) and a tibial plate was uncovered and visible by the arthroscopic approach
Fig. 5a–d Drawing a, PDw fat sat sagittal b and axial MR c and arthroscopy d images of the same patient, show a peripheral meniscal vertical lesion (arrow), with a small meniscal fragment (asterisks) attached to the ramp
Fig. 6a–c Drawing a, PDw fat sat sagittal MR b and arthroscopy c images of the same patient, show the association of more lesions. Ramp lesion (arrow), peripheral meniscal oblique lesion (dotted arrows), and meniscotibial ligament tear (arrowheads)
Diagnostic performance of magnetic resonance imaging in the diagnosis of ramp lesions, meniscotibial ligament lesions, peripheral fibrocartilage meniscal lesions, having arthroscopy as reference standard in a series of 56 patients
| Ramp lesion | Meniscotibial ligament lesion | Peripheral meniscal lesion | |
|---|---|---|---|
| True positive | |||
| False positive | |||
| False negative | |||
| True negative | |||
| Sensitivity | 97.4% (86.2–99.9%) | 95.8% (78.9–99.9%) | 94.4% (72.7–99.9%) |
| Specificity | 88.9% (65.3–98.6%) | 81.3% (63.6–92.8%) | 97.4% (86.2–99.9%) |
| PPV | 94.9% (82.7–99.4%) | 79.3% (60.3–90.2%) | 94.4% (72.7–99.9%) |
| NPV | 94.1% (71.3%–99.9%) | 96.3% (81.0%–99.9%) | 97.4% (86.2%–99.9%) |
| Accuracy | 94.6% (85.1–98.9%) | 87.5% (75.9–94.8%) | 96.4% (87.7–99.6%) |
Note: 95% confidence intervals are indicated in brackets. PPV positive predictive value; NPV negative predictive value
MR and arthroscopy classifications
| MR | Arthroscopy | |
|---|---|---|
| Isolated ramp lesion | ||
| Isolated MTL lesion | ||
| Isolated peripheral meniscal lesion | ||
Ramp + MTL Lesion | ||
Peripheral meniscal + MTL lesion | ||
| Ramp + peripheral + MTL lesion |
Note: MTL meniscotibial ligament