2020
DOI: 10.1007/s00256-020-03405-z
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The prevalence of athletic pubalgia imaging findings on MRI in patients with femoroacetabular impingement

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Cited by 12 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, Saito et al 25 reported that alpha angle was significantly larger among patients with pubic BME as compared with those with no BME. Varada et al 29 evaluated patients with FAI and found that male sex, history of sports participation, and morphology of the femoral cam with an alpha angle ≥60° were significant predictors of damage patterns of athletic pubalgia on MRI scans. Notably, in our study, we did not observe SCS in patients with an LCE angle <22°, and we determined that SCS was more frequent in patients having cam impingement and excess acetabular coverage of the socket.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, Saito et al 25 reported that alpha angle was significantly larger among patients with pubic BME as compared with those with no BME. Varada et al 29 evaluated patients with FAI and found that male sex, history of sports participation, and morphology of the femoral cam with an alpha angle ≥60° were significant predictors of damage patterns of athletic pubalgia on MRI scans. Notably, in our study, we did not observe SCS in patients with an LCE angle <22°, and we determined that SCS was more frequent in patients having cam impingement and excess acetabular coverage of the socket.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, this signal change is thought to occur before the onset of symptoms [ 34 ] and may also progress asymptomatically [ 19 , 35 ]. Since many studies of the association between FAIS and osteitis pubis have considered MRI findings, including those of asymptomatic cases, superior in identifying osteitis pubis [ 6 , 8–10 , 36 ], we also used pubic BME on MRI to assess osteitis pubis in this study. We believe that this does not weaken the conclusions of the present study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…5 MRI with coronal T1, axial and sagittal PDFS sequences is 100% sensitive and 69.2% specific in the evaluation of chronic groin pain when compared with findings at the time of surgery. 6 In a study by Varada et al, 14 MRI findings consistent with CMI were more prevalent in patients with underlying FAI, compared with control subjects. Patients with FAI and an alpha angle >60 had a markedly higher number of aponeurotic plate tears, again emphasizing the overlap between CMI and FAI.…”
Section: Screening/examination and Imagingmentioning
confidence: 92%