Diagnostic Accuracy of Clinical Assessment, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Magnetic Resonance Arthrography, and Intra-articular Injection in Hip Arthroscopy Patients
Background : Hip arthroscopy has defined elusive causes of hip pain. Hypothesis/Purpose: It is postulated that the reliability of various investigative methods is inconsistent. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of these methods. Study Design: Retrospective review of pr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of sports medicine 2004-10, Vol.32 (7), p.1668-1674 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background : Hip arthroscopy has defined elusive causes of hip pain.
Hypothesis/Purpose: It is postulated that the reliability of various investigative methods is inconsistent. The purpose of this study is to evaluate
the diagnostic accuracy of these methods.
Study Design: Retrospective review of prospectively collected data.
Methods: Five parameters were assessed in 40 patients: clinical assessment, high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic resonance
imaging with gadolinium arthrography, intra-articular bupivacaine injection, and arthroscopy. Using arthroscopy as the definitive
diagnosis, the other parameters were evaluated for reliability.
Results: Hip abnormality was clinically suspected in all cases with 98% accuracy (1 false positive). However, the nature of the abnormality
was identified in only 13 cases with 92% accuracy. Magnetic resonance imaging variously demonstrated direct or indirect evidence
of abnormality but overall demonstrated a 42% false-negative and a 10% false-positive interpretation. Magnetic resonance arthrography
demonstrated an 8% false-negative and 20% false-positive interpretation. Response to the intra-articular injection of anesthetic
was 90% accurate (3 false-negative and 1 false-positive responses) for detecting the presence of intra-articular abnormality.
Conclusions: In this series, clinical assessment accurately determined the existence of intra-articular abnormality but was poor at defining
its nature. Magnetic resonance arthrography was much more sensitive than magnetic resonance imaging at detecting various lesions
but had twice as many false-positive interpretations. Response to an intra-articular injection of anesthetic was a 90% reliable
indicator of intra-articular abnormality.
Keywords:
hip arthroscopy
evaluation
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
magnetic resonance arthrography
hip pathology |
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ISSN: | 0363-5465 1552-3365 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0363546504266480 |