External femoropatellar instability is a dynamic abnormality from various origins: osseous, cartilaginous or musculotendinous; X-rays films cannot give a precise enough description of this phenomenon. Attention is drawn by anterior pain or a sensation of instability. Clinical analysis distinguishes between permanent, traumatic or transient dislocations which are now more frequently discovered as part of a femoro-patellar syndrome with or without cartilage involvement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To assess detectability of the components of the extensor hood, especially the sagittal bands, with magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in normal and injured metacarpophalangeal (MP) joints.
Materials And Methods: T2*-weighted, T1-weighted, and contrast material-enhanced T1-weighted images were obtained of 54 normal MP joints (108 sagittal bands). The ability to detect the sagittal bands with each sequence was rated for three observers.
This retrospective study included eight patients with villonodular synovitis of the knee (7 nodular forms and one villous form) who underwent magnetic resonance imaging and at least one arthroscopy. Joint enlargement and mild pain were the main manifestations. Other imaging studies provided little information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntraarticular concentration of gadolinium tetraazacyclododecanetetraacetic acid (DOTA) after intravenous injection and the diagnostic contribution of the subsequent arthrographic effect were assessed for meniscal lesions in the knee. Kinetics were studied in three healthy volunteers. Passage of contrast material into the synovial fluid of the joint was evaluated in 53 knees by measuring the signal intensity on T1-weighted images before, immediately after, and 1 hour after injection.
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