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1.
PURPOSE: To retrospectively characterize magnetic resonance (MR) arthrographic findings in patients with cam femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) and in those with pincer FAI. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Institutional review board approval and informed consent were not required. MR arthrographic studies obtained in 50 consecutive patients (30 men, 20 women; mean age, 28.8 years) with FAI were analyzed for labral abnormalities, cartilage lesions, and osseous abnormalities of the acetabular rim. The nonspherical shape of the femoral head at the head-neck junction was measured in eight positions around the femoral head and neck and used to calculate the alpha angle. Acetabular depth was measured. Surgical diagnosis served as the reference standard. The Wilcoxon rank sum test was used for statistical analysis. RESULTS: At surgery, hips in 33 patients were classified as having cam FAI and hips in 17 patients were classified as having pincer FAI. In both groups, the mean age of patients was 28.8 years. There were significantly more men (n = 27) with cam FAI and more women (n = 14) with pincer FAI. The alpha angle was significantly larger in patients with cam FAI at the anterior and anterosuperior positions. The acetabulum was significantly deeper in patients with pincer FAI than in patients with cam FAI. Cartilage lesions at the anterosuperior and superior positions were significantly larger in patients with cam FAI than in patients with pincer FAI. Cartilage lesions at the posteroinferior position were significantly larger and labral lesions at the posterior and posteroinferior positions were more pronounced in patients with pincer FAI than in patients with cam FAI. Osseous abnormalities were not significantly different between the groups. Osseous bump formation at the femoral neck was significantly more common in patients with cam FAI than in patients with pincer FAI. CONCLUSION: Characteristic MR arthrographic findings of cam FAI include large alpha angles and cartilage lesions at the anterosuperior position and osseous bump formation at the femoral neck; characteristic findings of pincer FAI include a deep acetabulum and posteroinferior cartilage lesions.  相似文献   

2.
The aim of our study was to analyze the imaging findings of femoroacetabular impingement (FAI). Eight consecutive patients [age range, 19–46 years (mean, 28.6 years); M/F ratio=7:1] who underwent operation for FAI were analyzed. We analyzed bump, acetabular retroversion and protrusion, and osteoarthritis in the radiographs. In MR arthrography, we analyzed α-angle, anterolateral labral tear, cartilage abnormality, herniation pit, paralabral cyst, subchondral cyst, and marrow edema. We correlated the imaging findings with operative findings. In the radiographs, all eight patients showed bump and osteoarthritis (Kellgren–Lawrence score II–IV), and five (62.5%) patients showed acetabular retroversion. In MR arthrography, anterolateral labral tear and mild cartilage abnormality (Outerbridge grade I and II) were seen in all eight patients; increased α-angle was seen in six cases (75%). Anterolateral labral tear, bump, and mild cartilage abnormality were seen in all eight patients during operation. According to the above findings, we divided the patients into three cam-type and five mixed-type FAI. In the five mixed-type FAI, both bump and acetabular retroversion were seen. The mixed-type FAI is the most prevalent type in our study. The main imaging findings of mixed-type FAI were acetabular retroversion, bump, and early osteoarthritis in radiographs, and anterolateral labral tear, cartilage abnormality, and increased α-angle in MR arthrography.  相似文献   

3.
Cartilage lesions in the hip: diagnostic effectiveness of MR arthrography   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
PURPOSE: To evaluate the diagnostic performance of magnetic resonance (MR) arthrography in the detection of articular cartilage lesions in patients suspected of having femoroacetabular impingement and/or labral abnormalities. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Forty-two MR arthrograms obtained in 40 patients with a clinical diagnosis of femoroacetabular impingement and/or labral defect were retrospectively analyzed. Two readers independently interpreted the images for cartilage lesion location, depiction, and characteristics. Within 6 months after MR arthrography, each patient underwent open hip surgery, during which the entire cartilage of the hip joint was inspected. Sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and positive and negative predictive values were calculated. kappa values were calculated to quantify the level of interobserver agreement. RESULTS: At surgery, most (37 [88%] of 42) cartilage defects were identified in the anterosuperior part of the acetabulum. In 23 (55%), 12 (29%), 10 (24%), and 10 (24%) hips, lesions were found in the posterosuperior acetabulum, anteroinferior acetabulum, posteroinferior acetabulum, and femoral head, respectively. The sensitivities and specificities of MR arthrographic detection of cartilage damage in all regions combined were 79% (73 of 92 regions) and 77% (91 of 118 regions), respectively, for reader 1 and 50% (46 of 92 regions) and 84% (99 of 118 regions), respectively, for reader 2. At interobserver comparison, agreement was fair (kappa = 0.31) for detection of cartilage lesions in the femoral head and poor (kappa 相似文献   

4.
AIM: To describe the association of bone marrow oedema adjacent to areas of fibrocystic change at the femoral head and neck junction in patients with femoroacetabular impingement. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The clinical and imaging findings in six patients with bone marrow oedema adjacent to an area of fibrocystic change at the femoral head and neck junction are presented. There were five males and one female (age range 19-42 years, mean age 34.5 years). Three patients were referred with a clinical suspicion of femoroacetabular impingement, two with suspected osteoid osteoma and one with a clinical diagnosis of sciatica. The volume of bone marrow oedema (grade 1: 0-25%, grade 2: 26-50%, grade 3: 51-75% and grade 4: 76-100% of the femoral neck width), presence of labral and articular cartilage abnormality, joint effusion, and femoral head and neck morphology were recorded. RESULTS: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) identified fibrocystic change in the anterolateral aspect of the femoral head and neck junction in all cases (mean size 9 mm, range 5-14 mm, three multilocular and three unilocular cysts). The volume of oedema was variable (one grade 1, two grade 2, one grade 3 and two grade 4). All patients had abnormality of the anterosuperior labrum with five patients demonstrating chondral loss. An abnormal femoral head and neck junction was identified in five patients. CONCLUSION: The radiological finding of fibrocystic change at the anterosuperior femoral neck with or without bone marrow oedema should prompt the search for femoroacetabular impingement. Bone marrow oedema may rarely be identified adjacent to these areas of cystic change and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of bone marrow oedema in the femoral neck.  相似文献   

5.
髋关节撞击综合征影像表现的初步探讨   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
目的 探讨髋关节撞击综合征(FAI)的影像表现.方法 回顾性分析经手术证实的9例FAI患者的影像资料,9例患者均行髋关节正侧位X线检查及患髋MR检查,其中1例还接受了患髋关节MR关节造影检查,探讨其影像特征性改变.结果 9例患者X线表现均出现股骨头颈交界处骨性突起或髋臼过度覆盖.MR检查显示9例患者均出现不同程度的髋臼盂唇损伤,均出现在前上盂唇,ⅠA期损伤2例,ⅠB期损伤3例,ⅡA期损伤2例,ⅡB期损伤2例;1例患髋关节MR造影检查显示髋臼前上盂唇内线样裂隙,可见对比剂进入裂隙.2例的股骨头负重区软骨下骨内出现硬化囊变区,手术证实相应部位出现直径2 cm大小的软骨剥脱.结论 MRI可以显示FAI患者髋臼盂唇及关节软骨损伤,有助于早期诊断FAI.  相似文献   

6.
Objective To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of MR imaging in the identification of labral and articular cartilage lesions in patients with acetabular dysplasia.Design and patients Pre-operative MR imaging was performed on 27 hips in 25 consecutive patients (16 males, 9 females, age range 19–52 years, mean age 31.2 years) with radiographic evidence of acetabular dysplasia (centre-edge angle of Wiberg <20 degrees). The average duration of symptoms was 16.2 months. Two musculoskeletal radiologists assessed MR images in consensus for the presence of abnormality involving the acetabular labrum and adjacent acetabular articular cartilage. A high resolution, non-arthrographic technique was used to assess the labrum and labral chondral transitional zone. Surgical correlation was obtained in all cases by a single surgeon experienced in hip arthroscopy and ten patients with normal hip MRI were included to provide a control group.Results The acetabular labra in the dysplastic hips demonstrated abnormal signal intensity, and had an elongated appearance when compared with the control group (mean length 10.9 mm vs 6.4 mm). Morphological appearances in the labra included surface irregularity, fissures and cleft formation. MR imaging correctly identified the severity of chondral abnormality in 24 of 27 hips (89%) when compared with arthroscopic findings.Conclusions MR imaging demonstrates an elongated labrum, focal intra-substance signal change and irregularity and fissuring of the margins in patients with acetabular dysplasia. Abnormality is also identified at the labral chondral transitional zone, where fissuring, focal clefts, chondral deficiency and subchondral cyst formation may be apparent. A high-resolution, non-arthrographic technique can provide an accurate preoperative assessment and evaluate the presence of premature osteoarthritis.  相似文献   

7.
Sundberg TP  Toomayan GA  Major NM 《Radiology》2006,238(2):706-711
Institutional review board approval and informed consent were obtained for this HIPAA-compliant study. The purpose of this study was to prospectively compare imaging of the acetabular labrum with 3.0-T magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and 1.5-T MR arthrography. Eight patients (four male, four female; mean age, 38 years) with hip pain suspicious for labral disease were examined at both MR arthrography and MR imaging. Presence of labral lesions, paralabral cysts, articular cartilage lesions, subchondral cysts, osteophytes, and synovial herniation pits was recorded. There was arthroscopic correlation of findings in five patients. MR imaging depicted four surgically confirmed labral tears that were identified at MR arthrography, as well as one that was not visualized at MR arthrography. MR imaging helped identify all other pathologic conditions that were diagnosed at MR arthrography and helped identify one additional surgically confirmed focal articular cartilage lesion. These results provide encouraging support for evaluation with 3.0-T MR imaging over 1.5-T MR arthrography.  相似文献   

8.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of multidetector CT (MDCT) arthrography in the diagnosis of intra-articular hip pathology. A retrospective review of 96 patients who had undergone CT hip arthrography was performed. Data regarding the presence of a labral tear, paralabral cyst, chondral loss, acetabular version, femoral morphology and fibrocystic change were collected. We detected 28 labral tears (24 anterior, 2 anterolateral, 1 lateral and 1 posterolateral). An abnormal labral-chondral transitional zone was seen in 9 patients and 4 patients had surface labral fraying. We identified three paralabral cysts. Acetabular cartilage loss was detected in 45 and femoral cartilage loss in 9 patients. An abnormal anterior femoral head and neck junction was present in 18 hips and fibrocystic change in 8. Acetabular retroversion was present in 11 hips. 63 sets of patient notes were reviewed, of which 49 were in-patients with abnormal MDCT arthrogram findings. Surgical correlation was available in 27 patients. There was a discrepancy between the findings of a labral tear in one patient (false negative, 90% sensitivity and 100% specificity) and the presence of acetabular cartilage loss (88% sensitivity and 100% specificity) and femoral cartilage loss (94% sensitivity and 100% specificity) in three patients. MDCT arthrography affords accurate detection of intra-articular hip pathology.The investigation of suspected intra-articular hip pathology is challenging. Arthroscopy represents the gold standard but is invasive, necessitates a general anaesthetic and is best reserved for patients in whom concomitant therapeutic intervention is to be undertaken. Much of the radiology literature has focused on the use of MR arthrography of the hip to detect labral and cartilage pathology [15]. A number of groups have also studied the role of non-contrast MRI in the detection of labral tears associated with femoroacetabular impingement and acetabular dysplasia [69]. Both non-contrast MRI and MR arthrography have limitations in terms of spatial resolution, which can make the detection of subtle labral and cartilage pathology challenging [4]. Modern spiral multidetector CT (MDCT) technology allows submillimetre spatial resolution and has revitalised interest in the role of CT arthrography in the wrist, shoulder, knee, elbow and ankle [1017]. There are few published data on the utility of this technique in the investigation of intra-articular hip pathology. Several studies have investigated the ability of MDCT arthrography to assess cartilage loss in the hip and have demonstrated that its accuracy is equal to, or can outperform, MR arthrography [1820]. There are limited reports regarding the ability of MDCT arthrography to assess labral pathology [9]. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of MDCT arthrography in the diagnosis of intra-articular hip pathology in a consecutive group of patients.  相似文献   

9.

Introduction  

In our institutional experience, determination of the alpha (α) angle at MR arthrography as an indicator of the likelihood of cam-type femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) is fraught with inconsistency. The aims of this study were to quantify the degree of variability in and calculate the diagnostic accuracy of the α angle in suggesting a diagnosis of cam impingement, to determine the accuracy of a positive clinical impingement test, and to suggest alternative MR arthrographic measures of femoral head–neck overgrowth and determine their diagnostic utilities.  相似文献   

10.

Objective

To determine the prevalence of femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) of the cam or pincer type based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in a group of adult female professional ballet dancers, and to quantify, in vivo, the range of motion (ROM) and congruence of the hip joint in the splits position.

Materials and methods

Institutional review board approval and informed consent from each volunteer were obtained. Thirty symptomatic or asymptomatic adult female professional ballet dancers (59 hips) and 14 asymptomatic non-dancer adult women (28 hips, control group) were included in the present study. All subjects underwent MRI in the supine position, while, for the dancers, additional images were acquired in the splits position. Labral abnormalities, cartilage lesions, and osseous abnormalities of the acetabular rim were assessed at six positions around the acetabulum. A morphological analysis, consisting of the measurement of the α angle, acetabular depth, and acetabular version, was performed. For the dancers, ROM and congruency of the hip joint in the splits position were measured.

Results

Acetabular cartilage lesions greater than 5 mm were significantly more frequent in dancer’s hips than in control hips (28.8 vs 7.1%, p?=?0.026), and were mostly present at the superior position in dancers. Distribution of labral lesions between the dancers and the control group showed substantially more pronounced labral lesions at the superior, posterosuperior, and anterosuperior positions in dancers (54 lesions in 28 dancer’s hips vs 10 lesions in 8 control hips). Herniation pits were found significantly more often (p?=?0.002) in dancer’s hips (n?=?31, 52.5%), 25 of them being located in a superior position. A cam-type morphology was found for one dancer and a retroverted hip was noted for one control. Femoroacetabular subluxations were observed in the splits position (mean: 2.05 mm).

Conclusion

The prevalence of typical FAI of the cam or pincer type was low in this selected population of professional ballet dancers. The lesions’ distribution, mostly superior, could be explained by a “pincer-like” mechanism of impingement with subluxation in relation to extreme movements performed by the dancers during their daily activities.  相似文献   

11.
Femoroacetabular impingement is an abnormal conflict of the acetabular rim and the femoral head-neck junction. This condition causes labral and cartilage damage and leads to early osteoarthritis of the hip. Femoral osteoplasty is performed to restore normal femoral head-neck offset while the amount of bony resection is monitored by periodic examination. Dynamic examination of the area of impingement, which cannot be performed in open treatment of cam impingement, confirms adequate resection and labral seal through hip range of motion.  相似文献   

12.
Morphological and spatial abnormalities of the proximal femur and acetabulum have been recently recognized as causes of femoroacetabular impingement. During joint motion in hips with femoroacetabular impingement, abnormal bony contact occurs, and soft tissue structures (chondral and labral) often fail. Femoroacetabular impingement has been reported to be a contributor to early-onset joint degeneration. Ganz et al have described good midterm success with an open surgical dislocation approach to reconstruct normal joint clearance. The purpose of this report is to discuss relevant literature and describe an arthroscopic approach to treat femoroacetabular impingement. This approach has particular relevance in high-demand patients, particularly in athletes seeking to return to high-level sport.  相似文献   

13.
Association of paralabral cysts with acetabular disorders   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
OBJECTIVE: Acetabular labral tears may cause considerable pain and predispose patients to premature osteoarthritis. Therefore, early and accurate examination is required. Acetabular labral tears are difficult to view on MR images. We report the association of paralabral ganglion cysts detected on MR imaging with surgically proven acetabular labral disorders. CONCLUSION: Paralabral cysts may be associated with labral disorders. The appearance of a paralabral cyst on MR imaging is a useful indirect sign of acetabular labral abnormality. Use of this sign may enable earlier and more accurate examination of labral disorders.  相似文献   

14.
15.

Objective

To determine the means and the reference intervals of the quantitative morphometric parameters of femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) in normal hips with high-resolution computed tomography (CT).

Methods

We prospectively included 94 adult individuals who underwent CT for thoracic, abdominal or urologic pathologies. Patients with a clinical history of hip pathology and/or with osteoarthritis on CT were excluded. We calculated means and 95 % reference intervals for imaging signs of cam-type (alpha angle at 90° and 45° and femoral head–neck offset) and pincer-type impingement (acetabular version angle, lateral centre-edge angle and acetabular index).

Results

The 95 % reference interval limits were all far beyond the abnormal thresholds found in the literature for cam-type and to a lesser extent for pincer-type FAI. The upper limits of the reference intervals for the alpha angles (at 90°/45°) were 68°/83° (men) and 69°/84° (women), compared to thresholds from the literature (50°, 55° or 60°). Reference intervals were similar between genders for cam-type parameters, and slightly differed for pincer-type.

Conclusion

The 95 % reference intervals of morphometric measurements of FAI in asymptomatic hips were beyond the abnormal thresholds, which was especially true for cam-type FAI. Our results suggest the need for redefining the current morphometric parameters used in the diagnosis of FAI.

Key Points

? 95 % reference intervals limits of FAI morphotype were beyond currently defined thresholds. ? Reference intervals of pincer-type morphotype measurements were close to current definitions. ? Reference intervals of cam-type morphotype measurements were far beyond the current definitions. ? Current morphometric definitions of cam-type morphotype should be used with care.  相似文献   

16.

PURPOSE

The purposes of this study were to assess the presence of cam and pincer morphology in asymptomatic individuals with a negative femoroacetabular impingement test, and to determine and compare the ranges of alpha angle using two measurement methods.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

In total, 68 consecutive patients who underwent abdominopelvic computed tomography (CT) for reasons other than hip problems were the patient population. Patients who had a positive femoroacetabular impingement test were excluded. Alpha angle measurements from axial oblique (AN) and radial reformat-based images (AR) from the anterior through the superior portion of the femoral head-neck junction, as well as femoral head-neck offset, center-edge angle, acetabular version angle measurements, and acetabular crossover sign assessment, were made.

RESULTS

Overall prevalences of cam (increased alpha angle, decreased femoral head-neck offset) and pincer morphology (increased center-edge angle, decreased acetabular version) were 20.0%, 26.8%, 25.8%, and 10.2% of the hips, respectively. The mean AR ranged from 41.64°±4.23° to 48.13°±4.63°, whereas AN was 41.10°±4.44°. The values of AR were higher than AN, and the difference was statistically significant (P < 0.001). The highest AR values were measured on images from the anterosuperior section of femoral head-neck junction.

CONCLUSION

In asymptomatic subjects, higher alpha angle values were obtained from radial reformatted images, specifically from the anterosuperior portion of the femoral head-neck junction compared with the axial oblique CT images. Other measurements used for the assessment of cam and pincer morphology can also be beyond the ranges that are considered normal in the general population.Femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) is a recognized risk factor for the development of osteoarthritis (1, 2). Morphological abnormalities of the proximal femur and/or acetabulum result in abnormal contact between the femur and acetabulum during hip motion, especially during flexion and internal rotation. The resulting abnormal stress on the acetabular labrum and articular cartilage can cause degeneration and tearing of the labrum, damage the adjacent acetabular cartilage, and eventually lead to osteoarthritis (1).Morphological variations and measurements demonstrating such alterations in the proximal femoral head and acetabulum that might be responsible for the development of FAI have become a research focus (27). The alpha angle (AA) is a parameter that demonstrates the degree of focal femoral epiphyseal overgrowth and reflects insufficiency of the anterolateral femoral head-neck offset and asphericity of the femoral head (5, 7). Since the concept of FAI was proposed, the AA measurement has become a widely used method to quantify osseous deformity at the femoral head-neck junction (5). However, there has been some controversy regarding its validity in clinical use, because of the substantial overlap in AA measurements between volunteers and symptomatic patients with cam-type deformity (8, 9).Our purposes in this prospective study were to determine the range of AA values in radial reformatted computed tomography (CT) images, to assess the prevalence of cam and pincer morphology in asymptomatic patients with a negative hip impingement test, and to compare the AA values using two measurement methods.  相似文献   

17.
Rim impingement lesions vary based on the underlying pathology. In general, rim impingement occurs with anterosuperior overhang, coxa profunda, protrusio acetabuli, and acetabular retroversion. The method for addressing these pathologic lesions depends on location and size of the impingement lesion, the underlying pathology, and the degree of labral damage. The ultimate goals of surgical management include accurate localization of the rim impingement lesion, adequate removal of the bony impingement lesion, and preservation and refixation of the viable labral tissue. If the surgeon feels that these goals cannot be accomplished safely and effectively by arthroscopic methods, alternative procedures should be considered.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: MRI has historically provided suboptimal visualization of tears of the acetabular labrum. Degenerative fraying and underlying cartilage abnormalities can often mimic tears of the labrum on conventional MRI. Administration of intraarticular gadolinium enhances the MRI appearance of the labrum to improve detection of labral abnormalities. This study examined the improved diagnostic sensitivity of MR arthrography compared with conventional MRI and the importance of confining the study to a small field of view. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifty-one hips were imaged in 48 patients. Fourteen hips underwent conventional MRI with a large field of view (30-38 cm). Seven hips underwent conventional MRI with a small field of view (14-20 cm). Thirty hips underwent MR arthrography with a small field of view (14-20 cm). Labral tears were diagnosed when contrast material was identified within the labrum or between the labrum and the acetabulum, when a displaced fragment was noted, or when a paralabral cyst was identified. All study results were compared with findings at the time of hip arthroscopy. RESULTS: Conventional MRI with a large field of view was 8% sensitive in detecting labral tears compared with findings at the time of arthroscopy. Diagnostic sensitivity was improved to 25% with a small field of view. MR arthrography with a small field of view was 92% sensitive in detecting labral tears. CONCLUSION: A combination of MR arthrography and a small field of view is more sensitive in detecting labral abnormalities than is conventional MRI with either a large or a small field of view.  相似文献   

19.
There are a multitude of well recognized hip and groin injuries that commonly affect athletes; however, a more recently recognized and possibly often overlooked cause of hip pain is that of femoroacetabular impingement (FAI). FAI is characterized by abutment of the femoral neck against the acetabular rim, which may occur by two mechanisms known as 'CAM' or 'pincer' impingement, although most commonly by a mixture of both. CAM impingement is characterized by abutment of the femoral neck against the acetabulum due to a morphological abnormality of the femoral head-neck junction. Pincer impingement occurs where an abnormality of the acetabulum results in impingement against an often normal femoral neck. Both CAM and pincer impingement are known to result in pathological consequences of cartilage delamination and labral lesions, leading to significant pain and disruption to athletic performance and activities of daily living in athletes. There are currently several methods of assessing the degree of impingement by use of CT and magnetic resonance imaging scans, which can be used in conjunction with magnetic resonance arthrography and arthroscopy to assess the damage caused to the underlying structures of the hip. Both open and arthroscopic surgical methods are used, with recent reports in athletes showing excellent results for lifestyle improvement and frequency of returning to sport. In cases of hip and groin pain in athletes, it is important to remember to look for typical history, and examination and imaging findings that may suggest a diagnosis of hip impingement. This article goes some way to explaining the principles, consequences and management of FAI.  相似文献   

20.
Hip pain is a common complaint among athletes of all ages. Advances in imaging and treatment are changing the paradigm of evaluation and management of hip pain. The role of abnormal femoral and acetabular morphology and lesions of the acetabular labrum and cartilage is increasingly recognized as being crucial in the development of degenerative change. In addition, femoroacetabular impingement is increasingly recognized as an etiologic factor in hip pain. This article discusses techniques of hip magnetic resonance (MR) arthrography, normal anatomy seen at hip MR arthrography, common intra-articular pathologies in patients with hip pain, and imaging findings of femoroacetabular impingement.  相似文献   

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