Magn Reson Imaging Clin N Am
February 2025
MR imaging evaluation of hamstring tendons reveals their association with subgluteal posterior hip pain, emphasizing the superiority of MR imaging over ultrasound due to the deep location of the hamstrings. This review encompasses various conditions, including overuse tendinopathy, metabolic disorders, and sports-related injuries prevalent in elite and recreational athletes. Practical MR imaging-guided approaches tailored to clinical needs and therapeutic options are discussed, highlighting MR imaging's crucial role in monitoring postinjury healing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMR imaging protocols and technical parameters should be optimized in order to achieve the best diagnostic results. Routine hip MR imaging includes a combination of T1-weighted and fluid-sensitive sequences, obtained in coronal, axial, and sagittal planes. MR arthrography of the hip can be used for assessment of intra-articular pathology involving intricate and signal-poor structures such as articular cartilage, labral fibrocartilage, and intra-articular bodies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Direct magnetic resonance arthrography (dMRA) is often considered the most accurate imaging modality for the evaluation of intra-articular structures, but utilization and performance vary widely without consensus. The purpose of this white paper is to develop consensus recommendations on behalf of the Society of Skeletal Radiology (SSR) based on published literature and expert opinion.
Materials And Methods: The Standards and Guidelines Committee of the SSR identified guidelines for utilization and performance of dMRA as an important topic for study and invited all SSR members with expertise and interest to volunteer for the white paper panel.
Semin Musculoskelet Radiol
June 2023
Ankle and foot injuries are very common injuries in the general population, and more so in athletes. MR imaging is the optimal modality to evaluate for ligamentous injuries of the ankle and associated conditions after ankle sprain. In this article, the authors discuss the epidemiology, biomechanics, normal anatomy, and pathology of the ankle as well as injuries of the hindfoot and midfoot that are often associated with ankle injuries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagn Reson Imaging Clin N Am
November 2022
In this article, we describe the postoperative appearances of the reconstructed ligaments of the knee focusing on the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). The expected evolving signal alterations of the graft over time are also reviewed. The postoperative appearance of the ligamentous reconstruction in patients with multiligamentous knee injuries (MLKI) and isolated PCL tears are also discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinical symptoms of pelvic entrapment neuropathies are widely variable and frequently nonspecific, thus rendering it difficult to localize and diagnose. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and in particular MR neurography, has become increasingly important in the work-up of entrapment neuropathies involving the pelvic and hip nerves of the lumbosacral plexus. The major sensory and motor peripheral nerves of the pelvis and hip include the sciatic nerve, superior and inferior gluteal nerves, femoral nerve, lateral femoral cutaneous nerve, obturator nerve, and pudendal nerve.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropathies of the elbow represent a spectrum of disorders that involve more frequently the ulnar, radial, and median nerves. Reported multiple pathogenic factors include mechanical compression, trauma, inflammatory conditions, infections, as well as tumor-like and neoplastic processes. A thorough understanding of the anatomy of these peripheral nerves is crucial because clinical symptoms and imaging findings depend on which components of the affected nerve are involved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To study the diagnostic utility of the "smoke sign" to detect unsuspected acute pectoralis major tendon injury on routine shoulder MRI.
Materials And Methods: Retrospective study of 52 shoulder MRI in patients with (38) and without (14) acute pectoralis major injury confirmed on imaging. Two readers independently reviewed shoulder MRI for the presence of the "smoke sign"-feathery soft tissue edema lateral or anterior to short head biceps/coracobrachialis on fluid-sensitive coronal-oblique and sagittal-oblique images, respectively.
Background: Avulsion fractures of the humeral lesser tuberosity are rare injuries in skeletally immature patients and can pose a diagnostic challenge that often leads to delayed identification.
Objective: To describe the demographics, mechanism of injury and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings of lesser tuberosity avulsion fractures in children.
Materials And Methods: A retrospective search of children with lesser tuberosity avulsion fractures on MRI was done.
Chronic foot pain is a frequent clinical complaint, which can significantly impact the quality of live in some individuals. These guidelines define best practices with regards to requisition of imaging studies based on specific clinical scenarios, which have been grouped into different variants. Each variant is accompanied by a brief description of the usefulness, advantages, and limitations of different imaging modalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvaluation of traumatic peripheral nerve injuries has classically been based on clinical and electrophysiologic criteria. US and MRI have been widely used for morphologic assessment of nerve injury sites and concomitant lesions. In the past few years, morphologic MR neurography has significantly increased its clinical applications on the basis of three-dimensional or two-dimensional images with and without fat-suppression techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShoulder pain is one of the most common reasons for musculoskeletal-related physician visits. Imaging plays an important role in identifying the specific cause of atraumatic shoulder pain. This review is divided into two parts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEntrapment neuropathies of the lower extremity are commonly encountered and present a diagnostic challenge. Historical diagnostic workhorses-the physical examination combined with electrodiagnostic studies-are now frequently supplemented by MR neurography. MR neurography is a high-resolution, noninvasive, and operator-independent imaging modality that has proven useful in diagnosis, disease severity assessment, and informing treatment decisions in the management of lower extremity entrapment neuropathies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Postoperative imaging after surgery for anterior glenohumeral instability poses a great challenge, which can be compounded by a lack of familiarity with the many different operative techniques and their expected normal appearances and complications. In this article, we discuss the postoperative imaging appearances of anterior glenohumeral instability surgery with a review of currently recommended treatment guidelines.
Conclusion: It is important for radiologists to accurately detect complications of anterior shoulder instability surgery at postoperative imaging.