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Query: UMLS:C0003873 (rheumatoid arthritis)
53,068 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Efficacious management of patients with avascular necrosis of bone (AVN) necessitates the identification of patients with a high risk of collapse of the femoral head. In this prospective study we imaged both hips of 10 patients with active rheumatoid arthritis, who were treated with methylprednisolone pulse therapy. MRI and conventional radiography were performed before MP-pulse therapy and 6 and 12 months thereafter. Two patients showed unilateral changes, compatible with AVN. One patient became symptomatic and revealed characteristic radiographic abnormalities. The other patient remained asymptomatic and the MRI appearance returned to normal after 6 months.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of the femoral head to detect avascular necrosis in active rheumatoid arthritis treated with methylprednisolone pulse therapy. 861 70

By definition, monoarticular arthritis means one-joint involvement, even though, in fact, such a condition is often an oligoarthritis because as many as two or three separate joints will be involved. Arthritis is often limited and may regress, so that it is frequently misdiagnosed. Sometimes, a monoarticular condition may be a polyarthritis onset (i.e., rheumatoid arthritis). Monoarticular arthritis can be caused by many factors, such as infections (septic arthritis), nonspecific inflammatory processes (reactive arthritis), crystals deposition (gout, CPPD crystal deposition disease), trauma, neoplasm (pigmented villonodular synovitis), immunologic conditions (amyloidosis) and hormonal changes (parathyroid disease). Its onset is usually acute and sometimes dramatic, with fever, pain and joint swelling, so that a decision must be made promptly to stop rapid illness evolution and to prevent the irreversible destruction of cartilage and bone (especially in septic arthritis). Diagnostic studies are performed with mono-bilateral radiographs of the joint. Radiographic findings (i.e., soft tissue swelling, joint effusion, widening and thinning of joint spaces, bone erosions and destruction of bone surface) are typical of the disease, but some findings (e.g., type of evolution and progression), laboratory tests, synovial biopsy and arthroscopy can differentiate infectious from inflammatory forms. Scintigraphy can depict isotopic joint uptake, before articular abnormalities are demonstrated with radiography, thanks to its high sensitivity; nevertheless, because of its low specificity, scintigraphy may miss some kinds of lesions (including osteoarthritis) and cannot easily differentiate osteomyelitis from septic arthritis. CT and MRI play a secondary, though not negligible, role, especially to study such deep infections as psoas abscesses, which may mimic arthritides.
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PMID:[Monoarthritis]. 868 51

MRI intravenous contrast enhancement of inflammatory synovium has been studied at two different doses to determine to what extent enhancement is dose dependent. 19 patients with clinically active rheumatoid arthritis involving a knee were scanned twice, one week apart, using 0.1 mmol/kg of gadoteridol (ProHance) on the first occasion and 0.3 mmol/kg on the second. Static pre-and post-contrast images together with dynamic images immediately following injection were obtained on a 1.0T scanner. On subjective assessment, 84% of patients showed improved enhancement. 47% showed more enhancing tissue, a clearer delineation of enhancing tissue or both. Objectively, enhancement was increased significantly at the higher dose, as judged by the percentage increase in mean signal intensity within regions of interest plotted over the suprapatellar pouch (1723% v. 1005% enhancement P < 0.05). In practical terms the better visualization of enhancing tissue achieved with higher doses is likely to reduce margins of error in attempts at quantification from MRI scans, particularly of synovial volume, but emphasizes also the need for care and consistency to be exercised in calculating the exact dose of contrast medium to be administered.
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PMID:Advantages of an increased dose of MRI contrast agent for enhancing inflammatory synovium. 868 24

A multiplanar approach and a good tissue differentiation characterize magnetic resonance imaging which have a great role in exploring numerous musculo-skeletal lesions; review of main indications and limits. MRI is useful in diagnosing certain undisplaced fractures, fatigue and insufficiency fractures, and consequences. Fibrous cartilage and hyalin cartilage lesions, tears of tendons, ligaments and muscles are well appreciated. MRI is also very good for an early and correct diagnosis of avascular necrosis, spinal degenerative lesions, spinal consequences of rheumatoid arthritis and ankylosing spondylitis, and bone metastases. It is the technique of choice for local staging of bone and soft tissue sarcomas.
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PMID:[Magnetic resonance imaging of the locomotor apparatus]. 876 42

In the light of more modern techniques such as sonography and magnetic resonance imaging, the reader may well ask if plain radiography has still a role in the diagnostic work-up of rheumatoid arthritis. However, in daily routine, the value of diagnostic radiography in support of the clinical and laboratory diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis is unrivaled. It allows differentiation from other joint diseases, such as osteoarthritis or crystal arthropathies, when the ARA criteria are not conclusive for the diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis. Further, plain radiography is part of the basic documentation of the disease in measuring disease progression. Therapeutic decisions, such as systemic versus local therapy, and selection of drugs, as well as the form of local therapy, are heavily dependent on radiographs. However, the limitations of radiography in evaluating disease progression have to be recognized. Ultrasonography, as a 'bedside method', and MRI are indispensable adjuncts to radiography, because they are superior in detecting synovitis, early forms of cartilage damage as well as bone reaction such as erosions and cysts. A superior assessment of the degree of synovial changes is also possible with MRI.
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PMID:Diagnostic radiography in rheumatoid arthritis: benefits and limitations. 887 48

Determination of the synovial membrane volume in the rheumatoid arthritis (RA) wrist by gadolinium-DTPA-enhanced MRI is introduced. Moreover, dynamic imaging and an MRI score of synovial hypertrophy, based on gradings in six regions, are evaluated as substitutes of the time-consuming volume calculations. Twenty-six RA wrists were examined. Synovial membrane volumes ranged from 1 to 20 ml (median 9 ml). Synovial hypertrophy scores were highly correlated to synovial volumes (Spearman r = 0.88; P < 10(-8) for uncorrelated values). The volumes and scores were significantly higher in wrists with joint swelling and/or joint tenderness than in wrists without these signs (Mann-Whitney, both P < 0.05). Suboptimal slice selection made dynamic imaging uninformative. MRI allows quantification of the synovial volume in the rheumatoid wrist. The volume is related to clinical signs of inflammation, but may also give information about the cumulated synovial proliferation in the joint. An easily obtained score of synovial hypertrophy reflects the synovial volume and may thus be a useful marker of synovial involvement.
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PMID:Quantitative assessment of the synovial membrane in the rheumatoid wrist: an easily obtained MRI score reflects the synovial volume. 888 34

Rheumatoid pseudocysts of which pathogenesis are not well known, are commonly observed in the major joints of the body, especially knees in rheumatoid patients. This report investigated the pseudocysts in the knee of a rheumatoid patient radiologically and immunohistochemically. A sixty-three-year-old woman with rheumatoid arthritis who had pseudocysts in the femoral lateral condyle and tibial plateau was hospitalized to have the lesions surgically removed. The MRI findings showed a connection between the pseudocysts and the joint cavity. A window of 1 x 1 cm2 was made at the tibial anterior cortex and the contents of the pseudocyst were resected and hydroxyapatite granules were inserted into the lesion after the removal of the pseudocyst tissue. In the histological findings, the specimen from the tibial pseudocyst revealed fibrous connective tissue with a few inflammatory cells, while the synovial specimen revealed the fibrous tissue with intense inflammatory cells infiltration forming lymphoid follicules. In immunohistochemical findings, both specimens showed positive with anti-HLA class I, anti-HLA DR, anti-CD44 and anti-HSP70 antibodies. The pathological findings of the pseudocystic lesion were similar to those of synovia, and it was considered that the synovia had invaded into the bone and formed the pseudocystic lesion. The MRI findings also support this hypothesis. The pseudocystic lesion was surrounded by bone and it was isolated from cytokain-rich joint effusion. This isolation from rheumatic joint effusion may explain the weaker inflammation of the pseudocystic lesion than that of synovia.
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PMID:[A case study of immunohistochemical findings of rheumatic pseudocystic lesions in the femoral lateral condyle and tibial plateau--the comparison with synovial lesions]. 891 Oct 84

In twenty-five patients with a clinical diagnosis of suspected sacroiliitis conventional radiography, CT and MRI were performed. In ten patients no abnormalities were demonstrated. In thirteen cases CT and MRI revealed sacroiliitis. In two patients with normal plain films and CT para- and intraarticular changes of signal intensity suggested suspicious sacroiliitis. MRI can be considered as an important imaging modality for early diagnosis of sacroiliitis. In eighteen patients with a firm diagnosis of ankylosing spondylitis and plain films of the thoracolumbar junction suggesting destructive Romanus and Anderson inflammatory lesions MRI was done. Two distinct groups of inflammatory changes were found. In ten patients MRI findings compatible with active inflammatory enthesitis were revealed at the disco-vertebral junction. In eight cases focal and linear changes of signal intensity within the intervertebral disks suggested an active inflammation. Using MRI the spectrum of inflammatory changes in sero-negative spondylitis can be presented. In sixteen patients with definite clinical diagnosis (psoriatic arthritis--thirteen cases and Reiter's syndrome--three cases) plain films and MRI of small hand joints were performed. The patients fell into two distinct groups. In the first MRI findings could not be differentiated from those seen in rheumatoid arthritis. In nine cases the distribution and extent of soft tissue findings were different, similar to changes seen in enthesitis. Therefore, on the basis of MRI findings in small peripheral joints easier differential diagnosis between sero-negative spondyloarthritides and rheumatoid arthritis is possible. In five patients with a diagnosis of Reiter's syndrome having clinical signs of enthesitis plain films and MRI of calcaneus were done. MRI revealed findings compatible with active inflammation which resembled those seen at the attachment of the annulus fibrosus and collateral ligaments of the small hand joints.
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PMID:[MR imaging in seronegative spondyloarthritis]. 897 79

Conventional radiograms have been used to quantitate the progression of rheumatoid arthritis, mainly through the assessment of bone erosions, but this approach has many limitations. It has been suggested that an advantage of contrast-enhanced Gd-DTPA MRI over radiography may be its prognostic value due to its ability to show the natural history of active destructive to inactive fibrous pannus. The aim of this study was to evaluate the possible prognostic value of MRI for future development of bone erosive changes in small hand joints in patients with RA. The results of the study confirm that in joints in which inflammatory active pannus is shown by contrast-enhanced MRI, progression of bone-destructive changes can be expected.
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PMID:Prognostic value of contrast enhanced Gd-DTPA MRI for development of bone erosive changes in rheumatoid arthritis. 901 86

The knees of forty-three patients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis (RA) were examined using pre- and post-contrast MRI in an attempt to assess the extent and frequency of all abnormalities in the RA knee. Features evaluated by MRI were: synovial thickening, joint effusion, bone destruction, popliteal cysts, periarticular soft tissue swelling, abnormal tendons and bone marrow changes. A scoring system (0-2) was used to determine the relationship between the various signs of RA in order to identify those that may be relevant for the assessment of therapeutic response. It seems that the assessment of inflamed synovium is the major criterion for the determination of disease activity in RA.
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PMID:MRI evaluation of the knee in rheumatoid arthritis. 901 88


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