The finding on MRI of subchondral BME cannot satisfactorily explain the presence or absence of knee pain. However, women with BME and full-thickness articular cartilage defects accompanied by adjacent subchondral cortical bone defects were significantly more likely to have painful OAK than painless OAK.
Peripheral nerve sheath tumors are often hypoechoic with posterior acoustic enhancement and so may simulate a ganglion cyst. The presence of intrinsic blood flow on color Doppler sonography and peripheral nerve continuity suggests the diagnosis of peripheral nerve sheath tumor. Sonography cannot reliably distinguish neurofibromas from schwannomas.
In middle-aged women, there were significant associations between pain, radiographic severity of OA of the knee, and seven MR imaging-identified parameters.
Enlargement of the quadriceps fat pad on MRI has a prevalence of 12% and is significantly associated with intermediate or fluid signal intensity of the quadriceps fat pad and anterior knee pain.
Complex knee injuries are common, often resulting from multiple forces: varus, valgus, hyperextension, hyperflexion, internal rotation, external rotation, anterior or posterior translation, and axial load. Certain combinations of forces are known to cause specific injury patterns. After a review of the literature, the authors developed a mechanism-based classification system based on patterns of bone marrow edema and ligament injury for complex knee injuries depicted at magnetic resonance imaging. The classification system takes into account knee position and forces and recognition of patterns of bone injury and complementary soft-tissue injury. Ten mechanism-based injury patterns were recognized: (a) pure hyperextension, (b) hyperextension with varus, (c) hyperextension with valgus, (d) pure valgus, (e) pure varus, (f) flexion with valgus and external rotation, (g) flexion with varus and internal rotation, (h) flexion with posterior tibial translation, (i) patellar dislocation (flexion, valgus, and internal rotation of femur on fixed tibia), and (j) direct trauma. Recognition of these patterns may help assess the full extent of knee injury, particularly at the posterolateral and posteromedial corners of the knee.
Asymptomatic shoulder abnormalities were found in 96% of the subjects. The most common were subacromial-subdeltoid bursal thickening, acromioclavicular joint osteoarthritis, and supraspinatus tendinosis. Ultrasound findings should be interpreted closely with clinical findings to determine the cause of symptoms.
Objective. To determine whether Caucasian women ages 28-48 years with newly defined osteoarthri-tis (OA) would have greater bone mineral density (BMD) and less bone turnover over time than would women without OA. Methods. Data were derived from the longitudinal Michigan Bone Health Study. Period prevalence and 3-year incidence of OA were based on radiographs of the dominant hand and both knees, scored with the Kellgren/Lawrence (K/L) scale. OA scores were related to BMD, which was measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry, and to serum osteocalcin levels, which were measured by radioimmunoassay. Results. The period prevalence of OA (K/L grade >2 in the knees or the dominant hand) was 15.3% (92 of 601), with 8.7% for the knees and 6.7% for the hand. The 3-year incidence of knee OA was 1.9% (9 of 482) and of hand OA was 3.3% (16 of 482). Women with incident knee OA had greater average BMD (z-scores 0.3-0.8 higher for the 3 BMD sites) than women without knee OA (P < 0.04 at the femoral neck). Women with incident knee OA had less change in their average BMD z-scores over the 3-year study period. Average BMD z-scores for women with prevalent knee OA were greater (0.4-0.7 higher) than for women without knee OA (P < 0.002 at all sites). There was no difference in average BMD z-scores or their change in women with and without hand OA. Average serum osteocalcin levels were lower in incident cases of hand OA (>60%; P 0.02) or knee OA (20%; P not significant). The average change in absolute serum osteocalcin levels was not as great in women with incident hand OA or knee OA as in women without OA (P < 0.02 and P < 0.05, respectively). Conclusion. Women with radiographically defined knee OA have greater BMD than do women without knee OA and are less likely to lose that higher level of BMD. There was less bone turnover among women with hand OA and/or knee OA. These findings suggest that bone-forming cells might show a differential response in OA of the hand and knee, and may suggest a different pathogenesis of hand OA and knee OA. Osteoarthritis (OA) is a major chronic disease. It has been estimated to affect 1 in 10 people at age 50 and 1 in 2 people at age 75 (1). Likewise, osteoporosis (OP) is a highly prevalent condition that has been estimated to affect 1 woman in 5 by age 80 (2). Thus, OP and OA are both common conditions that are more likely to affect women than men. It is relatively unusual, however, to find both conditions in the same individual. Early clinical comparisons showed that elderly persons undergoing resection of the femoral head to treat hip OA were much less likely to have evidence of bone loss than were elderly persons who had femoral neck fractures (3). Subsequent studies indicated that persons with OA of the knee or hip were more likely to have higher bone mass than normal subjects or subjects with OP (4-6), whereas patients with OA of the hand might not have greater bone mass (7-9). This suggests either a difference in the pathogenesis of hand and knee OA or a possible measurement artifact. (Great...
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