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Παρασκευή 5 Οκτωβρίου 2018

Meniscal pathologies on MRI correlate with increased bone tracer uptake in SPECT/CT

Abstract

Objectives

To assess the relationship of subchondral bone tracer uptake (BTU) on SPECT/CT and meniscal pathologies on MRI in patients with painful knees.

Methods

Twenty-five patients who had MRI and SPECT/CT within 3 months without knee surgery or grade ≥3 cartilage lesions were prospectively included. Maximum values of each subchondral femorotibial area were quantified and a ratio was calculated in relation to a femoral shaft reference region, which represented the BTU background activity. Meniscal lesions were graded (intact/degeneration/tear) and meniscal extrusion (no/yes) was assessed using MRI by two musculoskeletal radiologists blinded to the SPECT/CT findings. One-tailed Spearman correlations served for statistics (p < 0.05).

Results

Knees with meniscal degeneration or tear showed a significantly higher BTU in the medial femorotibial compartment (p = 0.045) when compared to intact menisci. Meniscal degeneration was associated with an increased BTU in the lateral femorotibial compartment; however, this was not statistically significant (p = 0.143). Patients with an extruded meniscus showed significantly higher BTU compared to a non-extruded meniscus (p < 0.020).

Conclusions

Medial femorotibial BTU in SPECT/CT was associated with meniscal pathologies. Highest BTU was found in patients with meniscal tears. SPECT/CT appears to be a useful imaging modality to identify patients with overloading or early osteoarthritis.

Key Points

Meniscal degeneration and tears correlate significantly with increased BTU using SPECT/CT.

Medial meniscus extrusion is associated with an increased BTU in SPECT/CT.

SPECT/CT allows detection of overloading and early osteoarthritis.



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