| Literature DB >> 35224657 |
Bernd Erber1, Nina Hesse2, Christian Glaser3, Andrea Baur-Melnyk2, Sophia Goller2, Jens Ricke2, Andreas Heuck2,3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Correct identification of adhesive capsulitis of the shoulder (ACS) has an important impact on adequate therapy. The aim of our study was to investigate the influence of intravenous contrast administration and of reader's experience on sensitivity and specificity of MRI in diagnosing ACS.Entities:
Keywords: Adhesive capsulitis; Intravenous contrast administration; MR imaging
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35224657 PMCID: PMC9283172 DOI: 10.1007/s00256-022-03994-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Skeletal Radiol ISSN: 0364-2348 Impact factor: 2.128
Fig. 1MR images from the left shoulder of a 49-year-old male with painful left shoulder but neither clinical nor MR imaging signs of ACS. A Fat-saturated oblique coronal PDw image shows a normal capsule of the axillary recess (arrow) without thickening or signal increase. There is tendinosis of the supraspinatus tendon (dotted arrow) and osteoarthritis of the acromioclavicular joint (star). B T2w oblique sagittal image demonstrates normal subcoracoid fat (arrow) as well as normal CHL (dotted arrow). C T1w fat-saturated oblique sagittal image after IV contrast shows no contrast enhancement of the capsule in the rotator interval (dotted arrow) and the axillary recess (arrow)
Fig. 2MR images from the left shoulder of a 53-year-old male with clinical signs of ACS. A Fat-saturated oblique coronal PDw image displays thickening and mild signal increase of the capsule of the axillary recess (arrow) indicating ACS. B T2w oblique sagittal image shows obliterated subcoracoid fat triangle (arrow) as well as a thickened CHL (dotted arrow) and capsule in the rotator interval. C T1w fat-saturated oblique sagittal image after IV contrast demonstrates capsular enhancement in the rotator interval (arrow) and axillary recess (dotted arrow)
Fig. 3Left shoulder of a 57-year-old male with clinical signs of ACS. A Fat-saturated coronal PDw image showing a normal capsule of the axillary recess (arrow). B T2w oblique sagittal image showing minimally obliterated subcoracoid fat (arrow) as well as a not thickened CHL (dotted arrow). The capsule in the rotator interval (arrowhead) is slightly thickened up to 5 mm but does not extend the threshold value of 7 mm indicative for ACS [26]. C T1w fat-saturated oblique sagittal image after IV contrast with strong enhancement in the rotator interval (arrow) and moderate enhancement of the axillary recess (dotted arrow)
Fig. 4Box plots showing medians, minimum and maximum for sensitivity and specificity in the diagnosis of ACS for 3 readers based on non-enhanced MRI alone and together with additional CE sequences. A Graph shows sensitivity in diagnosis of ACS with non-enhanced (non-CE) images alone and together with CE images. Mean sensitivity was 63.9% for non-enhanced images and 85.5 for non-enhanced plus CE images. B Graph shows specificity in diagnosis of ACS with non-enhanced and additional CE images. Mean specificity for non-enhanced images alone was 86.4% and 91.9% for non-enhanced plus additional CE images
Readers’ sensitivity and specificity
| Sensitivity (in %) | Specificity (in %) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Reader 1 | Non-enhanced | 61.7 | 77.5 |
| Non-enhanced + CE | 83.3 | 95.0 | |
| Reader 2 | Non-enhanced | 55.0 | 88.3 |
| Non-enhanced + CE | 85.0 | 85.0 | |
| Reader 3 | Non-enhanced | 75.0 | 93.3 |
| Non-enhanced + CE | 88.3 | 95.8 |
Values indicate sensitivity and specificity (columns) of all readers for non-enhanced and CE images (rows)
Confidence in diagnosis of ACS
| Uncertain | Probably | Certain | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| R1 non-enhanced | 44 | 113 | 23 | 180 |
| R1 non-enhanced + CE | 10 | 61 | 109 | 180 |
| R2 non-enhanced | 30 | 59 | 91 | 180 |
| R2 non-enhanced + CE | 16 | 45 | 119 | 180 |
| R3 non-enhanced | 45 | 103 | 32 | 180 |
| R3 non-enhanced + CE | 6 | 35 | 139 | 180 |
Values indicate how often each level of confidence (columns) was rated by every reader for non-enhanced and non-enhanced plus CE images (rows)
Fig. 5Subjective confidence in diagnosis of ACS. Graphs show plots for readers’ (reader 1: R1; reader 2: R2; reader 3: R3) subjective confidence in MR-based diagnosis of ACS based on our 3-point scale. For each reader, confidence increased significantly between non-enhanced (non-CE) and non-enhanced plus CE images (p < .001 for readers 1 and 3 and p < .01 for reader 2)