2015
DOI: 10.2152/jmi.62.109
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State-of-the-art ultrasonographic findings in lower extremity sports injuries

Abstract: : Athletes sometimes experience overuse injuries. To diagnose these injuries, ultrasonography is often more useful than plain radiography, computed tomography (CT), or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Ultrasonography can show both bone and soft tissue from various angles as needed, providing great detail in many cases. In conditions such as osteochondrosis or enthesopathies such as Osgood-Schlatter disease, SindingLarsen-Johansson disease, bipartite patella, osteochondritis dissecans of the knee, painful acce… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…(4,6) Ultrasonography may also demonstrate abnormalities surrounding the patellar tendon attachment such as reactive bursitis, patellar tendon lesions, cartilage swelling and neovascularisation at the tibial tuberosity. (8) Differential diagnoses of OSD include: (a) Sinding-Larsen-Johansson (SJS) disease; (b) Hoffa's fat pad impingement syndrome; (c) fracture of the tibial tuberosity; (d) infrapatellar bursitis; and (e) patellar tendonitis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(4,6) Ultrasonography may also demonstrate abnormalities surrounding the patellar tendon attachment such as reactive bursitis, patellar tendon lesions, cartilage swelling and neovascularisation at the tibial tuberosity. (8) Differential diagnoses of OSD include: (a) Sinding-Larsen-Johansson (SJS) disease; (b) Hoffa's fat pad impingement syndrome; (c) fracture of the tibial tuberosity; (d) infrapatellar bursitis; and (e) patellar tendonitis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Osgood-Schlatter disease is named after Robert Bayley Osgood, an American orthopedic surgeon, and Carl B. Schlatter, a Swiss surgeon, who described the condition independently in 1903 [ 1 ]. OSD can affect boys and girls around puberty.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Osgood-Schlatter disease (OSD) or osteochondrosis is a repetitive traction injury at the attachment of the patellar tendon to tibial tuberosity, causing an avulsion of tibial prominence from the tibial head [ 1 ]. It is one of the common causes of anterior knee pain among adolescents.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…When this ossicle becomes inflamed, the condition is called accessory navicular syndrome. There are three types of accessory navicular ossicles: Type I is a small round sesamoid bone in the posterior tibialis tendon; type II is triangular, connected to the navicular ossicle by fibrocartilage, and the most common type to result in symptoms; and type III is fused to the navicular ossicle (36). The only radiographic finding that suggests inflammation is soft-tissue swelling over the ossicle.…”
Section: Symptomatic Accessory Navicular Ossicle-mentioning
confidence: 99%