Magnetic resonance tomography (MR) was used to examine the femoral heads of 20 normals and of 56 patients with diseases of the femoral head, including Perthe's disease (four cases), adult necrosis of the femoral head (39 cases) and pain of unknown cause (13 cases). Femoral head necrosis and Perthe's disease regularly produce reduced signal intensity. The localisation of the areas of necrosis can be determined accurately in the coronary and sagittal plane. In 11 femoral heads, necrosis could be demonstrated unequivocally by MR in the presence of normal radiographic findings. Follow-up of nine patients with negative MR findings and indefinite symptoms confirmed the absence of necrosis.
Besides thickening of the plantar fascia and intratendinous signal intensity increase with contrast enhancement to some extent, bone marrow edema of the calcaneus and peritendinous edema close to the plantar fascia are characteristic signs of plantar fasciitis on MRI. Both signs can reliably be seen on STIR sequences only.
50 patients with a history of distortion injury of the cervical spine were examined with static and functional MRI. Functional MRI consisted of different patient's positions from maximal extension to maximal flexion (30 degrees, 0 degrees, 25 degrees, 40 degrees, 50 degrees). T2*-weighted gradient echo sequences were performed in a sagittal view for the different positions. Ligamentous instabilities and disc protrusions were seen only in functional MRI in 17 patients. These findings correlated with the neurological symptoms. Two patients were treated by operative fusion because of these findings.
The osseous manifestations of osteochondrosis dissecans are well demonstrated by conventional and computerised tomography. Beyond that, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is effective in evaluating the vitality and loosening of an osseous dissecate. Subchondral cavities and cartilaginous defects are detected with high accuracy. Further, MRI seems to be a useful method in childhood to differentiate a variant irregularity of the osseous articular surface from definite osteochondrosis dissecans.
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