Semin Musculoskelet Radiol
August 2023
The introduction of new ultrashort and zero echo time (ZTE) sequences is revolutionizing magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and optimizing patient management. These sequences acquire signals in tissues with very short T2: mineralized bone, cortical bone, and calcium deposits. They can be added to a classic MRI protocol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAJR Am J Roentgenol
August 2017
Objective: The purpose of this study is to evaluate stereoradiographic measurements of femoral torsion with different femoral positions, in comparison with CT measurements, with use of the current standard axial-slice technique. We hypothesize that CT measurements vary with femoral spatial positioning because of the resulting projection onto the CT plane, whereas stereoradiographic measurements, which are derived from a 3D reconstruction of the femur, remain constant.
Materials And Methods: Both in vitro and in vivo studies were conducted.
Semin Musculoskelet Radiol
September 2015
Dixon techniques are part of the methods used to suppress the signal of fat in MRI. They present many advantages compared with other fat suppression techniques including (1) the robustness of fat signal suppression, (2) the possibility to combine these techniques with all types of sequences (gradient echo, spin echo) and different weightings (T1-, T2-, proton density-, intermediate-weighted sequences), and (3) the availability of images both with and without fat suppression from one single acquisition. These advantages have opened many applications in musculoskeletal imaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImaging is an indispensable element of modern medicine but is not without risk. Low-dose irradiation due to spinal, abdominal, pelvic or cardiac radiography, and the increasing use of CT carries an additional, albeit moderate risk of cancer. Iodinated and gadolinium-containing contrast media, besides their direct toxicity, can trigger hypersensitivity and allergic-like reactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMore than 222 000 hip and knee prostheses are implanted each year in France and this number is growing. Simple radiography is generally used to examine these prostheses in situ but this method has several limitations, including superimposition, the inability to visualize some parts of the prosthesis and to study them in the axial plane, and poor visualization of intra- and peri-articular soft tissues. This article describes the advantages offered by computed tomography and ultrasonography in this setting
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNowadays, conventional or digitalized teleradiography remains the most commonly used tool for the study of the sagittal balance, sometimes with secondary digitalization. The irradiation given by this technique is important and the photographic results are often poor. Some radiographic tables allow the realization of digitalized spinal radiographs by simultaneous translation of X-ray tube and receptor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFoot and ankle problems are frequent, daily pathologies. Nowadays, imaging is able to put in evidence the most part of these affections, in a simple, non traumatic way. A good clinical examination is of highest importance to guide the imaging technique.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSonography is a safe, inexpensive and readily accessible technique which has acquired a major place in musculoskeletal imaging over the past two decades. Thanks to recent technical innovations such as high-definition multifrequency probes, compound effect, use of harmonic frequencies, power Doppler, and extended field of view, today's sonographic images are extremely precise. At the same time, based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) acquisitions, the sonographic anatomy has become broader and more detailed, and the sonographic semiology is more precise and reliable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Design: Comparison of functional radiographs in consecutive patients with low back pain with or without pain on sitting down and relieved by standing up.
Objectives: To detect radiologic signs possibly associated with a clinical symptom.
Summary Of Background Data: No link has been established between increased vertebral mobility and a specific pain pattern or a clinical symptom.
Background: Primary osteoarthritis is usually selected in either epidemiological or therapeutic studies. This implies exclusions. Among cases of secondary osteoarthritis considered for either stratification or exclusion--or for prognosis and treatment in daily practice--are those due to architectural defects.
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