Positional MR imaging of normal and injured knees

Objectives This study uses a practical positional MRI protocol to evaluate tibiofemoral translation and rotation in normal and injured knees. Methods Following ethics approval, positional knee MRI of both knees was performed at 35° flexion, extension, and hyperextension in 34 normal subjects (mean a...

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Veröffentlicht in:European radiology 2023-03, Vol.33 (3), p.1553-1564
Hauptverfasser: Griffith, James F., Leung, Cynthia T. P., Lee, Jeremiah C. H., Leung, Jason C. S., Yeung, David K. W., Yung, Patrick S. H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives This study uses a practical positional MRI protocol to evaluate tibiofemoral translation and rotation in normal and injured knees. Methods Following ethics approval, positional knee MRI of both knees was performed at 35° flexion, extension, and hyperextension in 34 normal subjects (mean age 31.1 ± 10 years) and 51 knee injury patients (mean age 36.4 ± 11.5 years, ACL tear n = 23, non-ACL injury n = 28). At each position, tibiofemoral translation and rotation were measured. Results Normal knees showed 8.1 ± 3.3° external tibial rotation (i.e., compatible with physiological screw home mechanism) in hyperextension. The unaffected knee of ACL tear patients showed increased tibial anterior translation laterally ( p = 0.005) and decreased external rotation ( p = 0.002) in hyperextension compared to normal knees. ACL-tear knees had increased tibial anterior translation laterally ( p < 0.001) and decreased external rotation ( p < 0.001) compared to normal knees. Applying normal thresholds, fifteen (65%) of 23 ACL knees had excessive tibial anterior translation laterally while 17 (74%) had limited external rotation. None (0%) of 28 non-ACL-injured knees had excessive tibial anterior translation laterally while 13 (46%) had limited external rotation. Multidirectional malalignment was much more common in ACL-tear knees. Conclusions Positional MRI shows (a) physiological tibiofemoral movement in normal knees, (b) aberrant tibiofemoral alignment in the unaffected knee of ACL tear patients, and (c) a high frequency of abnormal tibiofemoral malalignment in injured knees which was more frequent, more pronounced, more multidirectional, and of a different pattern in ACL-tear knees than non-ACL-injured knees. Key Points • Positional MRI shows physiological tibiofemoral translation and rotation in normal knees . • Positional MRI shows a different pattern of tibiofemoral alignment in the unaffected knee of ACL tear patients compared to normal control knees . • Positional MRI shows a high prevalence of abnormal tibiofemoral alignment in injured knees, which is more frequent and pronounced in ACL-tear knees than in ACL-intact injured knees .
ISSN:1432-1084
0938-7994
1432-1084
DOI:10.1007/s00330-022-09198-0