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1.

Objective

To compare, in terms of their demonstration of tears of the anterior glenoid labrum, oblique axial MR arthrography obtained with the patient''s shoulder in the abduction and external rotation (ABER) position, with conventional axial MR arthrography obtained with the patient''s arm in the neutral position.

Materials and Methods

MR arthrography of the shoulder, including additional oblique axial sequences with the patient in the ABER position, was performed in 30 patients with a clinical history of recurrent anterior shoulder dislocation. The degree of anterior glenoid labral tear or defect was evaluated in both the conventional axial and the ABER position by two radiologists. Decisions were reached by consensus, and a three-point scale was used: grade 1=normal; grade 2=probable tear, diagnosed when subtle increased signal intensity in the labrum was apparent; grade 3=definite tear/defect, when a contrast material-filled gap between the labrum and the glenoid rim or deficient labrum was present. The scores for each imaging sequence were averaged and to compare conventional axial and ABER position scans, Student''s t test was performed.

Results

In 21 (70%) of 30 patients, the same degree of anterior instability was revealed by both imaging sequences. Eight (27%) had a lower grade in the axial position than in the ABER position, while one (3%) had a higher grade in the axial position. Three whose axial scan was grade 1 showed only equivocal evidence of tearing, but their ABER-position scan, in which a contrast material-filled gap between the labrum and the glenoid rim was present, was grade 3. The average grade was 2.5 (SD=0.73) for axial scans and 2.8 (SD=0.46) for the ABER position. The difference between axial and ABER-position scans was statistically significant (p<0.05).

Conclusion

MR arthrography with the patient''s shoulder in the ABER position is more efficient than conventional axial scanning in revealing the degree of tear or defect of the anterior glenoid labrum. When equivocal features are seen at conventional axial MR arthrography, oblique axial imaging in the ABER position is helpful.  相似文献   

2.

Purpose

To determine the prevalence of a normal variant cleft/recess at the labral–chondral junction in the anterior, inferior, and posterior portions of the shoulder joint.

Materials and methods

One hundred and three consecutive patients (106 shoulders) who had a direct MR arthrogram followed by arthroscopic surgery were enrolled in this IRB-approved study. Scans were carried out on a 1.5-T scanner with an eight-channel shoulder coil. The glenoid rim was divided into eight segments and the labrum in all but the superior and anterosuperior segments was evaluated by two radiologists for the presence of contrast between the labrum and articular cartilage. We measured the depth of any cleft/recess and correlated the MR findings with surgical results. Generalized estimating equation models were used to correlate patient age and gender with the presence and depth of a cleft/recess, and Cohen’s kappa values were calculated for interobserver variability.

Results

For segments that were normal at surgery, a cleft/recess was present within a segment on MR arthrogram images in as few as 7 % of patients (within the posteroinferior segment by observer 1), and in up to 61 % of patients (within the posterosuperior segment by observer 1). 55–83 % of these were only 1 mm deep. A 2- to 3-mm recess was seen within 0–37 % of the labral segments, most commonly in the anterior, anteroinferior, and posterosuperior segments. Age and gender did not correlate with the presence of a cleft/recess, although there was an association between males and a 2- to 3-mm deep recess (p?=?0.03). The interobserver variability for each segment ranged between 0.15 and 0.49, indicating slight to moderate agreement.

Conclusion

One-mm labral–chondral clefts are not uncommon throughout the labrum. A 2- to 3-mm deep smooth, medially curved recess in the anterior, anteroinferior or posterosuperior labrum can rarely be seen, typically as a continuation of a superior recess or anterosuperior labral variant.  相似文献   

3.

Purpose

To evaluate prospectively the incidence of unclassifiable MR arthrography patterns of glenoid anterior–inferior labrum lesions, in patients with at least two episodes of recurrent antero-inferior shoulder dislocation.

Materials and methods

The MR shoulder Arthrography images of 36 patients, with at least two episodes of recurrent antero-inferior dislocation, were prospectively evaluated, during a period between November 2015 and Mai 2016. All patients were contacted after 6 months of the MR arthrography to evaluate their course of treatment. The MR arthrography images were analyzed by two radiologists, respectively with 5 and 15 years of experience in musculoskeletal radiology.

Results

36 cases of unclassifiable MR arthrography pattern of the anterior–inferior glenoid labrum were evaluated: in 13 out 36 cases (36.1%), the glenoid labrum has been described as “oedematous and swollen”; in 19 out 36 cases (52.8%), it has been described as “smooth” (not hypoplastic); in 4 out 36 cases (11.1%), it has been described as degenerated.

Conclusion

The unclassifiable MR arthrography patterns of fibrocartilage glenoid lesions after episodes of recurrent antero-inferior dislocation are commons. The unclassifiable MR arthrography patterns require a careful consideration, in order to improve the diagnostic and therapeutic multidisciplinary approach.
  相似文献   

4.

Objectives

To evaluate the localisation, frequency and amount of extravasation in patients with extra-articular contrast material leak into locations unrelated to the injection path in shoulder magnetic resonance (MR) arthrography and associated shoulder disorders.

Methods

The sites of extravasation were determined on the shoulder MR arthrography of 40 patients. The extravasations were measured on three vertical planes of the MR arthrography. Sufficient joint distension was assessed according to the transverse diameters of the axillary recess on coronal MR images.

Results

Extravasation of the contrast material occurred through the subscapular recess, the synovium of the biceps, and the axillary recess. In four cases, extravasations were observed in more than one anatomic location. The most common site of extravasation was along the subscapularis muscle. Superior labrum anterior-posterior (SLAP) lesions were found to be most frequently associated with extravasations. The amount of extravasation was significantly higher in patients with adhesive capsulitis compared with the patients with a different diagnosis (p?=?0.022).

Conclusions

The extravasations adjacent to the axillary recess do not always indicate glenohumeral ligament pathology. Massive subscapular extravasations were most frequently associated with adhesive capsulitis and SLAP lesions, and might be considered in the MR arthrography report.

Key Points

? Contrast material extravasation may reduce the diagnostic value of shoulder MR arthrography. ? The extravasations may occur into locations unrelated to the injection path. ? The extravasations adjacent to axillary recess can be misleading for HAGL lesion. ? Massive subscapular extravasations were frequently associated with adhesive capsulitis and SLAP lesions.  相似文献   

5.

Purpose

This study was undertaken to evaluate magnetic resonance (MR) arthrography in the detection and classification of lesions that may cause superior instability.

Materials and methods

Forty-two consecutive patients with clinical signs of chronic superior instability of the shoulder underwent MR arthrography followed by arthroscopic surgery. For each patient we retrospectively reviewed the MR arthrography and surgical findings.

Results

We detected 31 superior labral anterior posterior (SLAP) lesions, all confirmed on arthroscopy with three cases of underestimation: in the detection of SLAP lesions, the sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) of MR arthrography were 100%; in the evaluation of the type of SLAP lesion, sensitivity was 100%, specificity was 78.5%, accuracy was 92.8%, PPV was 71.7% and NPV was 100%. All cases of capsular laxity (13/42) and biceps tendon lesions (3/42) were confirmed on arthroscopy with sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, PPV and NPV of 100%. Eleven cuff lesions were detected on MR arthrography, 10 of which confirmed at arthroscopy: sensitivity was 100%, specificity was 96.8%, accuracy was 97.6%, PPV was 90.9% and NPV was 100%. Associated lesions were found in 38/42 patients.

Conclusions

Superior instability is frequently associated with different anatomical variants or pathological conditions, such as SLAP lesions. The role of MR arthrography is to describe the key features of lesions affecting the superior portion of the shoulder, including location, morphology, extent, and associated injuries and leanatomical variants and to correlate these features with clinical symptoms.  相似文献   

6.

Purpose

We report the prevalence of supraspinatus tendon tears seen on MR arthrography that are not seen on conventional MR exam in the same patient population.

Materials and methods

A total of 150 consecutive conventional shoulder MR and MR arthrography exams performed on the same patients who went on to arthroscopy were reviewed retrospectively by consensus reading of two musculoskeletal radiologists. Full-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears were assessed. None of the patients had previous shoulder surgery.

Results

There were 113 full-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears seen on conventional MR exam while there were 119 full-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears seen on MR arthrography. The six additional full-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears seen on MR arthrography but not seen on conventional MR exam were confirmed at arthroscopy.

Conclusions

Some full-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears are not seen on conventional MR exam but are seen on MR arthrography. This is most likely due to fibrosis at the supraspinatus tendon tear site simulating an intact tendon on conventional MR.  相似文献   

7.
Objective In recent years, radial imaging has been advocated for improved visualization of the acetabular labrum in magnetic resonance arthrography of the hip. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether radial imaging demonstrates labral tears not visible on standard imaging planes. Methods Fifty-four consecutive magnetic resonance (MR) arthrograms of the hip that included radial imaging over 2 years were retrospectively analyzed by two radiologists. Standard imaging planes and radial imaging were reviewed for identification of labral tears in four specific areas of the labrum: anterosuperior, posterosuperior, anteroinferior, and posteroinferior. The standard imaging sequences include fat-saturated spin-echo T1-weighted images in the coronal and oblique axial planes, non-fat-saturated T1-weighted images in the coronal and sagittal planes, and T2-weighted sequence in the axial plane. Radial imaging was performed as previously described using fat-saturated T1-weighted sequences. Results Using standard imaging planes, 50 anterosuperior, 31 posterosuperior, 10 anteroinferior, and 9 posteroinferior labral tears were detected in 54 MR arthrograms of the hip. Using radial sequences alone, 44 anterosuperior, 25 posterosuperior, 9 anteroinferior, and 5 posteroinferior labral tears were detected. In all four areas of the labrum, the radial imaging did not show any labral tear not seen on standard imaging planes. Discussion In MR arthrography of the hip, radial imaging did not reveal any additional labral tears. Standard imaging planes sufficiently demonstrate all acetabular labral tears.  相似文献   

8.

Objectives

To determine whether positioning of the arm in adduction and internal rotation would improve the confidence in the diagnosis of Bankart lesions in first time shoulder dislocators.

Methods

Eleven patients were imaged on an open bore MRI within 1–6 days of traumatic shoulder dislocation with the arm adducted and internally rotated, and subsequently the patients were reimaged with the arm adduced and externally rotated. Two blinded musculoskeletal radiologists determined the confidence of diagnosing labral tears in each of the two positions.

Results

An anterior–inferior labral tear was diagnosed in 11/11 patients in internal rotation and in 6/11 patients in external rotation. The average confidence was 2.8 in internal rotation and 1.5 in external rotation (on a scale of 0–3). Using a Wilcoxon signed rank test, the certainty of the diagnosis was determined to be significantly higher with the arm in internal rotation (P?=?0.016).

Conclusions

MRI performed with the arm in internal rotation for patients with acute first time anterior shoulder dislocation increases the certainty of the diagnosis of anterior–inferior labral tears.

Key Points

? Adduction and internal arm rotation improves the MRI diagnosis of Bankart tears. ? Arm positioning in ADIR has distinct advantages over abduction and external rotation. ? Early imaging after shoulder dislocation may provide a diagnostically useful “arthrographic” effect.  相似文献   

9.

Purpose

Indirect magnetic resonance arthrography (I-MRA) confers significant logistical advantages over direct MRA and does not require articular injection. In this study, we determined the diagnostic performance of I-MRA in relation to conventional MRI and arthroscopy or surgery in detecting tears of the glenoid labrum, including Bankart lesions and superior labral antero-posterior (SLAP) tears in a standard clinical setting.

Patients and methods

Ninety-one symptomatic patients underwent conventional MRI and I-MRA of the affected shoulder, followed by either arthroscopy or open surgery. The scans were interpreted independently by two experienced radiology consultants with a special interest in musculoskeletal radiology. Using the surgical findings as the standard of reference, sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy of conventional non-contrast MRI and I-MRA in the detection of labral tears were calculated.

Results

The sensitivity of I-MRA was 95 and 97 %, respectively, for two radiologists as opposed to 79 and 83 % for conventional MRI. For both radiologists, the specificity of I-MRA, as well as MRI, was 91 % for detection of labral tears of all types. Accuracy of diagnosis was 93 and 95 %, respectively, for two radiologists with indirect MRA, compared to 84 and 86 % with non-contrast MRI.

Conclusions

This retrospective study shows that I-MRA is a highly accurate and sensitive method for the detection of labral tears. The data obtained supports the use of I-MRA as standard practice in patients with shoulder instability due to suspected labral pathology where further investigative imaging is indicated.  相似文献   

10.

Objective:

We report our experience in diagnostic sensitivity of 3.0-T conventional MR vs 3.0-T MR arthrography of the hip for detection of acetabular labral tears and chondral defects in the same patient population.

Methods:

43 consecutive patients had both conventional hip MR and MR arthrography examinations performed. These examinations were reviewed retrospectively by independent reading of two musculoskeletal radiologists who read the MR and MR arthrogram examinations in a randomized fashion (i.e. MR and MR arthrogram examinations were read at separate sittings and in a randomized fashion so as not to bias reviewers). Scans were assessed for acetabular labral tears and chondral defects. All patients went on to arthroscopy.

Results:

Of these 43 patients, 40 had acetabular labral tears read by Reader 1 and 39 had acetabular labral tears read by Reader 2 on MR arthrogram, 39 had acetabular labral tears read by Reader 1 and 38 had acetabular labral tears read by Reader 2 on conventional MR examination. There were 42 labral tears in 43 patients at arthroscopy. There were four false-negative labral tears compared with arthroscopy on MR and three false negatives on MR arthrography for Reader 1 and five false negatives on MR and four false negatives on MR arthrography for Reader 2. Each reader had one false-positive labral tear compared with arthroscopy on both MR and MR arthrography. There were 32 acetabular chondral defects at arthroscopy. Reader 1 saw 21 acetabular chondral defects on conventional MR and 27 chondral defects at MR arthrography. Reader 2 saw 19 acetabular chondral defects at conventional MR and 25 acetabular chondral defects on MR arthrography. There were no false-positive readings of chondral defects compared with arthroscopy on MR and one false positive for Reader 1 and two false positives for Reader 2 on MR arthrography as compared with arthroscopy. On conventional MR examination, sensitivities and specificities as compared with arthroscopy were as follows: Reader 1 acetabular labral tear (90% sensitivity, 0% specificity) and Reader 2 acetabular labral tear (88% sensitivity, 0% sensitivity). On MR arthrogram, sensitivities and specificities as compared with arthroscopy for Reader 1 were 93%, 0% and for Reader 2 were 90%, 0%, respectively. Sensitivities and specificities for detection of acetabular chondral defects as compared with arthroscopy were Reader 1 conventional MR (65% sensitivity, 100% specificity), Reader 1 MR arthrography (81% sensitivity, 91% specificity), Reader 2 conventional MR (59% sensitivity, 100% specificity) and Reader 2 MR arthrography (71% sensitivity, 82% specificity).

Conclusion:

In this series, 3.0-T MR demonstrated sensitivity for detection of acetabular labral tears that rivals the sensitivity of 3.0-T MR arthrography of the hip. In this series, 3.0-T MR arthrography was more sensitive than conventional 3.0-T MR for detection of acetabular chondral defects.

Advances in knowledge:

3.0-T MR and MR arthrography are near equivalent in the diagnosis of acetabular labral tears. This information is useful for pre-operative planning.MR arthrography has been reported to be more sensitive and specific for detection of acetabular labral tears in the hip than conventional MRI.110 MR arthrography has also been reported to be superior in detection of acetabular cartilage defects as compared with conventional MRI.11 To our knowledge 3.0-T MR vs 3.0-T MR arthrography sensitivity for detection of acetabular labral tears and chondral defects has not been specifically assessed.To our knowledge, Petersilge et al1 first reported the utility of hip MR arthrography in the diagnosis of acetabular labral tears. Toomayan et al2 compared MR arthrography of the hip with conventional MRI of the hip in different patient populations. He found MR arthrography with a small field of view to be substantially more sensitive for detection of acetabular labral tears than conventional MRI. Sutter et al11 found 1.5 T MR arthrography to be superior to conventional MRI for detecting labral tears and acetabular cartilage defects.Patients with acetabular labral tears present with symptoms of persistent pain, clicking, locking and decreased range of motion. With the availability of hip arthroscopy, labral tears can more easily be addressed with minimally invasive surgery. Accurate pre-operative identification of labral tears is needed.2 Based on previous studies demonstrating the accuracy of MR arthrography in detection of acetabular labral tears, surgeons often request MR arthrography of the hip to characterize labral tears prior to surgery.110 The purpose of this study is to assess 3.0-T MR vs MR arthrography diagnostic performance in detection of acetabular labral tears and chondral defects in the same patient population using arthroscopy as a reference standard.  相似文献   

11.

Objective

The purpose of the study was to describe the variation of the superior labrum with increasing age by assessing magnetic resonance (MR) arthrograms.

Methods

Inclusion criteria were used to include only the MR arthrograms of patients devoid of clinical labral pathology. Two hundred thiry-six MR arthrograms were blindly assessed for biceps-labral complex (BLC) type 1–3 and sublabral recess size by a musculoskeletal radiologist. We have chosen the BLC system, which defines normal superior labral variants, since it is established in the literature and is used by reporting musculoskeletal (MSK) radiologists.

Results

The MR arthrograms demonstrated that the majority of patients <40 years old were BLC type 1 and showed a steady increase in BLC types 2 and 3 with increasing age. Assessments demonstrated significantly greater (p?<?0.01) mean BLC types (1.62 vs 1.29) and recess size (1.35 vs 0.66 mm) in those over 40 compared with those less than 40 years of age. Furthermore, significant differences (p?<?0.05) were noted between mean BLC assessments between different decades of age.

Conclusions

There appears to be a physiologic deepening of the superior labrum sulcus with age, which becomes significant after the age of 40. These findings can contribute to whether the superior labrum is considered abnormal when assessed radiographically. The differentiation of normal age-related changes in the shoulder, from those of a type 2 SLAP tear can reduce the rates of unnecessary SLAP-2 repairs. This is the first reported series to use the BLC system; we believe it provides a common nomenclature to allow clear communication between specialists.  相似文献   

12.

Purpose

The purpose of this research was to retrospectively characterize paralabral cysts of the hip as seen at MR arthrography.

Materials and methods

After Institutional Review Board approval, 704 patients who had MR arthrography were identified over a 3-year period and 40 patients were identified as having a cyst or fluid collection at the hip by MR report. MR images from these 40 patients were retrospectively reviewed by three radiologists where 18 were found to have a paralabral cyst, which were characterized as follows: location, configuration, contrast filling, size of the cyst, extent, direction, and whether associated osseous changes were present. In addition, the acetabular labrum was assessed for tears and, if present, the location and pattern were characterized.

Results

Paralabral cysts were located anterosuperiorly in 56%, anteriorly in 22%, posterosuperiorly in 17%, and anteroinferiorly in 6% of cases. The vast majority (94%) were multilocular and filled with intra-articular contrast medium. The average dimensions were 8?×?7?×?11?mm. The paralabral cyst demonstrated extracapsular extension in 72% of cases, with 39% located between the ilium and gluteus minimus, and 22% between the ilium and iliopsoas. Remodeling of the ilium adjacent to the cyst was observed in 50% of these cases. A labral tear was at the base of the labrum adjacent to the cyst in 78% of cases, while the tear was isolated to the body of the labrum in 22%. Tears were most commonly anterosuperior (55%) or anterior (28%) in location.

Conclusion

Our results show that paralabral cysts of the hip are most commonly located anterosuperiorly, are multilocular, fill with intra-articular contrast medium, have average dimensions up to 11?mm, and often extend extracapsularly between muscle and bone where they may remodel the adjacent ilium.  相似文献   

13.
Jung JY  Jee WH  Park MY  Lee SY  Kim YS 《Skeletal radiology》2012,41(11):1401-1410

Objective

To assess the diagnostic performance of shoulder MR arthrography with 3D isotropic fat-suppressed (FS) turbo spin-echo sequence (TSE-SPACE) for supraspinatus tendon tears in comparison with 2D conventional sequences at 3.0?T.

Materials and methods

The study was HIPAA-compliant and approved by the institutional review board with a waiver of informed consent. Eighty-seven arthroscopically confirmed patients who underwent 3.0?T shoulder MR arthrography with 2D sequences and 3D TSE-SPACE were included in a consecutive fashion from March 2009 to February 2010. Two reviewers independently analyzed 2D sequences and 3D TSE-SPACE. Sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and interobserver agreement (κ) were compared between 2D sequences and 3D TSE-SPACE for full-thickness and partial-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears together and for partial-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears alone.

Results

There were 33 full-thickness tears and 28 partial-thickness tears of supraspinatus tendons. For full-thickness and partial-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears together, the mean sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of both readers were 96, 92, and 94% on 2D sequences and 91, 84, and 89% on 3D TSE-SPACE. For partial-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears alone, the mean sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were 95, 92, and 94% on 2D sequences and 84, 85, and 84% on 3D TSE-SPACE. There was no statistical difference between 2D sequences and 3D TSE-SPACE. Interobserver agreements were almost perfect on 2D conventional sequences and substantial on 3D TSE-SPACE.

Conclusion

Compared with 2D conventional sequences, MR arthrography using 3D TSE-SPACE was comparable for diagnosing supraspinatus tendon tears despite limitations in detecting small partial-thickness tears and in discriminating between full-thickness and deep partial-thickness tears.  相似文献   

14.

Objective

Humeral avulsion of the glenohumeral ligament (HAGL) is an uncommon shoulder injury. We report the prevalence of HAGL lesions and other associated shoulder injuries in a large series of shoulder MR examinations. All results were correlated with surgery.

Materials and methods

MR reports of 1,000 consecutive conventional shoulder MR exams performed on patients with shoulder pain were reviewed in our information system for the word HAGL. A total of 743 patients went on to surgery. There were 23 HAGL lesions reported at surgery. Those 23 examinations were reviewed retrospectively in consensus by two musculoskeletal radiologists. Scans were assessed for HAGL lesions, full or partial thickness supraspinatus, infraspinatus or subscapularis tendon tears, superior labral anterior posterior (SLAP) tears, anterior or posterior labral tears, and Hill–Sachs lesions.

Results

All 23 patients had HAGL lesions at surgery. Sixteen HAGL lesions were seen on prospective MR reading and 17 HAGL lesions were seen on retrospective MR consensus reading. Six HAGL lesions were not seen on retrospective consensus reading. Sixteen patients had Hill–Sachs deformities, ten had subscapularis tendon tears, five had supraspinatus tendon tears, six had superior labral tearing, and six had anterior labral tears. The above findings were confirmed on arthroscopy.

Conclusions

In this series, there was a 1.6 % prevalence on all MR examinations, and prevalence of 2.1 % seen on MR examination for those who went to surgery. Common injuries associated with HAGL lesions are Hill–Sachs deformities and subscapularis tendon tears. Anterior labral tears were seen in only six cases despite Hill–Sachs deformities in 16 patients. In patients with Hill–Sachs deformities without anterior labral tears, one must carefully assess for the presence of a HAGL lesion.  相似文献   

15.

Objective

To evaluate the value of hip MR for diagnosing acetabular labrum tears, and to further compare the diagnostic performances of conventional MR with MR arthrography in acetabular labrum tears.

Methods

90 patients undergoing both hip MR examination and subsequent hip arthroscopy were retrospectively evaluated. Of these patients, 34 accepted both conventional MR and MR arthrography; while the other 56 only underwent conventional MR examination. All hip MR images were independently reviewed by two radiologists, and further compared with the results of hip arthroscopy.

Results

59 of 90 patients were confirmed with acetabular labral tears by hip arthroscopy and 31 without tears. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV) and negative predictive value (NPV) of conventional MR for evaluating the acetabular labral tears were 61.0%, 77.4%, 83.7% and 51.1% (radiologist A), and 66.1%, 74.2%, 82.9% and 53.4% (radiologist B), respectively, with good consistency between the two observers (K = 0.645). The sensitivity, specificity, PPV and NPV of MR arthrography for assessing the acetabular labral tears were 90.5%, 84.6%, 90.5% and 84.6% (radiologist A), and 95.2%, 84.6%, 90.9% and 91.7% (radiologist B), respectively, with excellent good consistency between the two observers (K = 0.810). The sensitivity and NPV of MR arthrography for diagnosing the acetabular labral tears were significantly higher than those of conventional MR (both P < 0.05).

Conclusion

Hip MR arthrography is a reliable evaluation modality for diagnosing the acetabular labral tears, and its diagnostic performance is superior to that of conventional MR at 3.0 T.  相似文献   

16.

Objectives

To compare the rotator interval and capsular dimension as measured on MR arthrography between patients with clinically diagnosed multidirectional instability (MDI) and control subjects with no instability.

Materials and methods

We retrospectively reviewed a consecutive series of 658 shoulders that had undergone MR arthrography between 2006 and 2010. Of these, 97 shoulders were included in the present study. These shoulders were divided into two groups according to the clinically established diagnoses. The MDI group comprised 47 shoulders with atraumatic multidirectional shoulder instability, and the control group comprised 50 shoulders with no instability. Two independent observers measured the width and depth of the rotator interval, and the capsular dimensions at the anterior, anteroinferior, inferior, posteroinferior, and posterior regions in the two groups using MR arthrography.

Results

The rotator interval width and depth were significantly greater in the MDI group (width, observer 1, 17.7 mm, observer 2, 17.9 mm; depth, observer 1, 8.9 mm, observer 2, 8.8 mm) than in the control group (width, observer 1, 14.3 mm, observer 2, 14.5 mm; depth, observer 1, 5.9 mm, observer 2, 6.2 mm) (p?<?.001). The capsular dimensions at the inferior and posteroinferior regions were significantly larger in the MDI group (inferior, observer 1, 27.9 mm, observer 2, 27.8 mm; posteroinferior, observer 1, 27.0 mm, observer 2, 27.1 mm) than in the control group (inferior, observer 1, 25.7 mm, observer 2, 25.3 mm; posteroinferior, observer 1, 23.3 mm, observer 2, 23.6 mm) (p?<?.05). A width greater than 15.2 mm or a depth greater than 6.4 mm of the rotator interval, suggesting MDI, had sensitivities of 81 and 92 % for observer 1, and 79 and 94 % for observer 2, and specificities of 66 and 72 % for observer 1, and 62 and 66 % for observer 2, respectively.

Conclusions

Measurements of the rotator interval and the size of the distended inferior and posteroinferior joint capsule on MR arthrography are greater in shoulders with clinical MDI than in stable shoulders.  相似文献   

17.

Objective:

To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of three-dimensional (3D) enhanced T1 high-resolution isotropic volume excitation (eTHRIVE) shoulder MR for variable shoulder pathology such as rotator cuff tear, labral injury and synovial pathology in comparison with two-dimensional enhanced fast spin echo T1 fat saturation (2D T1 FS) sequences MR.

Methods:

This retrospective study included 86 patients who underwent MRI of the shoulder using eTHRIVE technique. Two radiologists evaluated anatomic identification of the supraspinatus, glenoid labrum and acromioclavicular joint (AC joint) on routine MRI sequences (2D T1 FS) and compared them with the reformatted eTHRIVE images. Subjective scoring of the images was performed with a four-point scale that rated the degree of discrimination of the shape of the supraspinatus, glenoid labrum and AC joint. The diagnostic accuracy of eTHRIVE compared with routine MR images was evaluated in terms of rotator cuff pathology, labral pathology and synovial pathology.

Results:

Anatomic identification scores of the supraspinatus tendon and labrum were significantly lower for eTHRIVE than for 2D T1 FS. There were no significant differences between eTHRIVE and 2D T1 FS in anatomic identification of the AC joint. There were no significant differences between eTHRIVE and 2D T1 FS in diagnosing the three disease categories.

Conclusion:

eTHRIVE had comparable diagnostic accuracy to 2D T1 FS imaging in the evaluation of rotator cuff tears, labral injury and synovial pathology, but anatomic identification was inferior to that of 2D T1 FS.

Advances in knowledge:

The accuracy of 3D eTHRIVE imaging is comparable to that of 2D T1 FS for the diagnosis of rotator cuff tears, labral injury and synovial pathology.  相似文献   

18.
The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the anatomical variability of the superior labrum and to compare the value of MR arthrography and multi-slice CT arthrography in the diagnosis of variants of the labro-bicipital complex. Forty-three human shoulder specimens (age range and mean age at death, 61–89 years and 78.3 years) were examined with the use of MR arthrography and multi-slice CT arthrography prior to joint exploration and macroscopic inspection of the superior labrum and labro-bicipital complex. Two radiologists evaluated MR and CT arthrograms, and the results were compared with macroscopic assessments. Anatomical dissection of all shoulder specimens revealed a sublabral recess in 32/43 (74%) cases. The attachment of the superior labrum was categorised as type 1 in ten (23%) cases, as type 2 in eight (19%), as type 3 in ten (23%), and as type 4 in 14 (33%) cases. One superior labrum showed detachment consistent with a superior labral anteroposterior (SLAP) type 3 lesion. On MR arthrography and CT arthrography the attachment of the superior labrum was categorised in concordance with macroscopic assessments in 79% and 84% of cases, respectively. The anteroposterior extension of sublabral recesses was accurately determined with MR and CT arthrography in 59% and 81% of cases, respectively. The attachment of the superior labrum shows considerable variability. Thus, exact depiction of variants is essential in order to avoid the false positive diagnosis of a superior labral tear (SLAP or Andrews lesion). Both, MR arthrography and multi-slice CT arthrography were effective in the detection and classification of sublabral recesses.  相似文献   

19.

Objectives

To compare axial T1weighted fat-saturated (T1w fs) and T1w non-fs sequences, and coronal T1w-fs and T2w-fs sequences, for evaluation of cartilage and labrum using CT arthrography (CTA) as the reference.

Methods

Patients had MR arthrography (MRA) and CTA of the shoulder on the same day. Cartilage was assessed for superficial and full thickness focal and diffuse damage. Labral lesions were graded for Bankart variants and SLAP lesions. CTA images were read for the same features. The diagnostic performance of MRA including area under the curve (AUC) was evaluated against CTA.

Results

When comparing axial sequences, the diagnostic performance for cartilage lesion detection on T1w non-fs was 61.9% (sensitivity) 93.6% (specificity) and 89.5% (accuracy) with AUC 0.782, while that for T1w fs was 61.9%, 94.0%, 89.8% and 0.783. For labral assessment, it was 89.1%, 93.0%, 91.4% and 0.919 for T1w non-fs, and 89.9%, 94.0%, 92.6% and 0.922 for T1w fs. Comparing coronal sequences, diagnostic performance for cartilage was 42.5%, 97.5%, 89.8% and 0.702 for T1w fs, and 38.4%, 98.7%, 90.2%, and 0.686 for T2w fs. For the labrum it was 85.1%, 87.5%, 86.2%, and 0.868 for T1w fs, and 75.7%, 97.5%, 80.8% and 0.816 for T2w fs.

Conclusions

Axial T1w fs and T1w non-fs sequences are comparable in their ability to diagnose cartilage and labral lesions. Coronal T1w fs sequence offers slightly higher sensitivity but slightly lower specificity than T2w fs sequence for diagnosis of cartilage and labral lesions.  相似文献   

20.

Purpose

The purpose of this study was to determine inter- and intraobserver variability of MR arthrography of the shoulder in the detection and classification of superior labral anterior posterior (SLAP) lesions.

Methods

MR arthrograms of 78 patients who underwent MR arthrography before arthroscopy were retrospectively analysed by three blinded readers for the presence and type of SLAP lesions. MR arthrograms were reviewed twice by each reader with a time interval of 4 months between the two readings. Inter- and intraobserver agreement for detection and classification of SLAP lesions were calculated using κ coefficients.

Results

Arthroscopy confirmed 48 SLAP lesions: type I (n?=?4), type II (n?=?37), type III (n?=?3), type IV (n?=?4). Sensitivity and specificity for detecting SLAP lesions with MR arthrography for each reader were 88.6%/93.3%, 90.9%/80.0% and 86.4%/76.7%. MR arthrographic and arthroscopic grading were concurrent for 72.7%, 68.2% and 70.5% of SLAP lesions for readers 1–3, respectively. Interobserver agreement was excellent (κ?=?0.82) for detection and substantial (κ?=?0.63) for classification of SLAP lesions. For each reader intraobserver agreement was excellent for detection (κ?=?0.93, κ?=?0.97, κ?=?0.97) and classification (κ?=?0.94, κ?=?0.84, κ?=?0.93) of SLAP lesions.

Conclusion

MR arthrography allows reliable and accurate detection of SLAP lesions. In addition, SLAP lesions can be diagnosed and classified with substantial to excellent inter- and intraobserver agreement.  相似文献   

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