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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (
thinning
)
11,252
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirteen patients with clinically diagnosed sprained ankles underwent magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Five of these cases are presented to illustrate the potential of MR imaging to enable identification of both primary and associated ligament injury sites, grading of the severity of the injuries, and visualization of the associated findings of tendon sheath and
joint effusion
. The appropriate combination of foot position and imaging plane is essential to achieve full-length visualization of each ligament. Two patients demonstrated findings compatible with total gross disruption of the anterior fibulotalar ligament; two, with injury to the fibulocalcaneal ligament with effusion of the overlying peroneus tendon sheath; and one, with
thinning
, lengthening, and fibrotic changes involving the anterior fibulotalar ligament. MR imaging can provide a noninvasive means to evaluate the site and severity of ankle ligament injuries (a) in acute ankle injuries that demonstrate significant instability, (b) in stable acute injuries involving athletes or litigation, or (c) in patients with repeated injuries or instability in whom surgery is contemplated.
...
PMID:MR imaging of the most commonly injured ankle ligaments. Part II. Ligament injuries. 162 Aug 56
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) permits visualization of anatomic structures not appreciated by conventional radiographic imaging and may quantify inflammatory disease and its progression with greater sensitivity than available techniques. We therefore compared MRI with clinical evaluation and with radiographic examination of 17 patients with inflammatory arthritis of the knee. We sought to determine anatomic integrity of bone, cartilage, menisci, and ligaments, and to quantify
joint effusion
and synovial proliferation. Patients studied had rheumatoid arthritis (10 patients), juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (4 patients), ankylosing spondylitis (1 patient), and monoarticular arthritis (2 patients). In all patients MRI revealed clinically important abnormalities not detected by physical or conventional radiographic exams. These included proliferative synovitis (13 patients), cartilage
thinning
(2 patients), cartilage erosion (8 patients), bone infarction (1 patient), meniscal injury (1 patient), and synovial invagination into bone (1 patient). Also MRI indicated inflammatory disease to be quantitatively greater than had been appreciated on clinical examination or routine X-ray studies--proliferative synovitis (12 patients), erosion (7 patients), effusion (8 patients), cartilage
thinning
(11 patients), and ligamentous/meniscal damage (1 patient). These findings led to reassessment of anatomic staging and influenced therapeutic decision for these patients. Thus MRI provides clinically important information about joint integrity and inflammatory disease, with a sensitivity and resolution considerably beyond conventional techniques.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in patients with inflammatory arthritis of the knee. 233 54
Radiologic assessment of the stage and treatment response of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is based on the presence of bone erosions, joint-space narrowing, and osteoporosis. Most radiologic methods for staging RA lack interobserver correlation and are time consuming. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging provides excellent depiction of soft-tissue abnormalities of the joints affected by RA, which allows detection of early changes. Nineteen joints of 17 patients with RA were studied with surface-coil MR imaging. Measurable abnormalities demonstrated by MR imaging but not clearly seen on plain radiographs included bone erosions,
joint effusion
, synovial sheath effusion, and cartilage irregularity and
thinning
. Seven patients of this group underwent MR imaging before and after 6 months of gold therapy. Four patients had significant interval changes on MR images that were not seen on plain radiographs. MR imaging may become a sensitive and objective method for quantitative assessment of the joint changes of RA.
...
PMID:Rheumatoid arthritis: MR imaging manifestations. 362 62
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.
...
PMID:[Monoarthritis]. 868 51
Focal full-thickness cartilage lesions of the human medial femoral condyle (MFC) can cause pain and functional impairment. Affected middle-aged patients respond unpredictably to existing treatments and knee arthroplasty may be required, prompting risk of revision. This study assesses the safety of, and biological and functional response to, a metallic resurfacing implant which may delay or obviate the need for traditional arthroplasty. The anatomic contour of the surgically exposed MFC of six adult goats was digitally mapped and an 11 mm diameter full-thickness osteochondral defect was created. An anchor-based Co-Cr resurfacing implant, matching the mapped articular contour, was implanted. Each goat's contralateral unoperated femorotibial joint was used as a control. Postoperative outcome was assessed by lameness examination, radiography, arthroscopy, synoviocentesis, necropsy, and histology up to 26 (n = 3) or 52 (n = 3) weeks. By postoperative week (POW) 4, goats demonstrated normal range of motion, no
joint effusion
, and only mild lameness in the operated limb. By POW 26 the animals were sound with only occasional very mild lameness. Arthroscopy at POW 14 revealed moderate synovial inflammation and a chondral membrane extending centrally across the implant surface. Radiographs at POWs 14 to 52 implied implant stability in the operated joints, as well as subchondral bone remodeling and mild exostosis formation in the operated and contralateral unoperated joints of some goats. By POW 26, histology revealed new trabecular bone abutting the implant. At POWs 26 and 52 MFC cartilage was metachromatic and intact in the operated and unoperated femorotibial joints. Proximal tibiae of some operated and unoperated limbs demonstrated limited subchondral bone remodeling and foci of articular cartilage fibrillation and
thinning
. The chondral membrane crossing the prosthesis possessed a metachromatic matrix containing singular and clustered chondrocytes. Our data imply the safety, biocompatibility, and functionality of the implant. Focal articular damage was documented in the operated joints at POWs 26 and 52, but lesions were much reduced over those previously reported in untreated defects. Expanded animal or preclinical human studies are justified.
...
PMID:Safety of, and biological and functional response to, a novel metallic implant for the management of focal full-thickness cartilage defects: Preliminary assessment in an animal model out to 1 year. 1660 73