| Literature DB >> 35454040 |
Paolo Falsetti1, Edoardo Conticini1, Carla Gaggiano1,2, Caterina Baldi1, Maria Tarsia2, Marco Bardelli1, Stefano Gentileschi1, Roberto D'Alessandro1, Suhel Gabriele Al Khayyat1, Alessandra Cartocci3, Claudia Fabiani4, Luca Cantarini1, Maria Antonietta Mazzei5, Bruno Frediani1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Power Doppler ultrasound (PDUS) with spectral wave analysis (SWA) has been compared with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in documenting active sacroiliitis in early spondyloarthritis (SpA) but, to date, PDUS/SWA has not been yet applied to the study of sacroiliac joints (SIJs) in children.Entities:
Keywords: juvenile spondyloarthritis; magnetic resonance imaging; pediatric; power doppler ultrasound; sacroiliitis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35454040 PMCID: PMC9029561 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12040992
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1Axial posterior scan over SIJs in a 15−year−old girl with jSpA. (A) Panoramic view that includes both SIJs (straight arrows). The profile of sacrum (s) is interrupted by the first sacral foramen (curved arrow) on both sides. i = ilium. Vascular signals can be observed into both sacral foramen and SIJs. (B) In a more distal axial scan over right side, clear vascular flows can be observed in the sacral foramen (curved arrow) and in the cleft of right SIJ (straight arrow). (C) The application of pulsed wave (PW) Doppler with spectral wave analysis (SWA) on the signal of sacral foramen (curved arrow) shows a high resistance normal flow (RI 0.77). (D) The application of pulsed wave (PW) Doppler with spectral wave analysis (SWA) on the signal of sacroiliac cleft (straight arrow) shows a low resistance flow (RI 0.54) suggesting vasodilatation due to SIJ inflammation.
Demographic, anthropometric, and clinical characteristics of patients. Data are expressed as mean (±standard deviation, SD), if not otherwise specified. The level of statistical significance was set at a p-level of 0.05. n.s. = not significant; * = p < 0.05; ** = p < 0.01; n.a. = not assessed. IBP = inflammatory back pain; jSpA = juvenile spondyloarthritis; PDUS = power Doppler ultrasound; BMI = body mass index; ESR = erytrosedimentation rate; CRP = C-reactive protein; JSpADA = juvenile spondyloarthritis disease activity; SIJ = sacroiliac joint; RI = resistive index; BME = bone marrow edema; BUSES = Belgrade Ultrasound Enthesitis Score.
| Patients Characteristics | Overall Population | Final jSpA Diagnosis | Not jSpA | Statistical Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 20 | 12 | 8 | |
| Age, in years (±SD) | 14.2 (±2.95) | 14.6 (±2.75) | 13.9 (±2.53) | n.s. |
| BMI percentile(±SD) | 67.6 (±26.8) | 74.3 (±24) | 54.2 (±29.7) | n.s. |
| ESR mm/h(±SD) | 23.8 (±22.9) | 28.9 (±25.2) | 11 (±8.08) | n.s. |
| CRP mg/dL (±SD) | 1.04 (±1.58) | 1.31 (±1.79) | 0.51 (±1.01) | n.s. |
| jSpADA (±SD) | 2.75 (±1.89) | 2.75 (±1.89) | n.a. | n.a. |
| -Patients with PDUS+ | 19 patients (95%) | 12 patients (100%) | 7 patients (87.5%) | n.s. |
| SIJs PD grading (±SD) | 1.20 (±0.523) | 1.42 (±0.515) | 0.875 (±0.354) | |
| SIJs PD grading (±SD) | 0.912 (±0.668) | 1.13 (±0.612) | 0.563 (±0.512) | |
| SIJs RI (±SD) patient level | 0.583 (±0.115) | 0.534 (±0.092) | 0.656 (±0.112) | |
| SIJs RI (±SD) joint level | 0.671 (±0.181) | 0.604 (±0.155) | 0.767 (±0.176) | |
| MRI SIJs BME lesions | 12 patients (60%) | 12 patients (100%) | 0 | n.a. |
| MRI SIJs capsulitis/enthesitis | 6 patients (30%) | 6 patients (50%) | 0 | n.a. |
| MRI lumbar spine inflammatory involvement | 5 patients (25%) | 5 patients (41.6%) | 0 | n.a. |
| Patients with US enthesitis | 4 patients (20%) | 3 (25%) | 1 (12.5%) | n.s. |
Figure 217−year−old girl with jSpA. (A) Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (the image has been rotated of 180° for a better comparison with the corresponding ultrasound scan): a short−tau inversion recovery (STIR) axial image shows a focal hyper−intense area of bone marrow edema (arrowhead) in the sacral side of left SIJ due to sacroiliitis. (B) PDUS/SWA over the same SIJ demonstrates a low resistance flow (RI 0.52), suggesting vasodilatation due to sacroiliitis. The majority of vessels observed in the posterior−superior portion of SIJ originate from branches of the posterior division of superior gluteal artery, which emerge from sacral foramina (note the intense vascular signals into the sacral foramen). i = ilium; s = sacrum.
Figure 3Comparisons of RI-SWA among the groups expressed as violin plots. The Kruskal–Wallis test showed significantly differences in RI values among groups (p < 0.001). The pairwise comparisons demonstrated lower RIs in jSpA respect both to not-jSpA patients (p = 0.005) and healthy subjects (p = 0.001), but not significant difference between not-jSpA patients and healthy subjects (p = 0.969).