AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to examine how meniscus status (intact vs. torn) affects the trabecular bone structure in the tibia using high-resolution MRI in cadaver knees.
  • MRI data was analyzed to compare bone density and structure in areas covered by menisci versus those that were uncovered, revealing significant differences based on meniscal condition.
  • Findings indicated that meniscal tears lead to higher bone density and other structural changes, highlighting the role of menisci in bone health and adaptation.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To compare regional differences in subchondral trabecular structure using high-resolution MRI in meniscus-covered/meniscus-uncovered tibia in cadaveric knees with intact/torn menisci.

Materials And Methods: 3D proton density CUBE MRI of 6 cadaveric knees without significant osteoarthritis (OA) was acquired, 0.25-mm resolution. Menisci were evaluated and classified intact or torn. MR data were transferred to ImageJ program to segment tibial 3D volume of interest (VOI). Data was subdivided into meniscus-covered/meniscus-uncovered regions. Segmented VOI was classified into binary data, trabeculae/bone marrow. The trabecular bone data was used to measure MR biomarkers (apparent subchondral plate-connected bone density (adapted from spine MR), apparent trabecular bone volume fraction, apparent mean trabecular thickness, apparent connectivity density, and structure model index (SMI)). Mean value of parameters was analyzed for the effects of meniscal tear/tibial coverage.

Results: Nine torn menisci and 3 intact menisci were present. MR measures of bone varied significantly due to meniscal coverage/tear. Subchondral plate-connected bone density under covered meniscus regions increased from 10.9 to 23.5% with meniscal tear. Values increased in uncovered regions, 19.3% (intact) and 32.4% (torn). This reflects higher density when uncovered (p = 0.048) with meniscal tear (p = 0.007). Similar patterns were found for trabecular bone fraction (coverage p < 0.001, tear p = 0.047), trabecular thickness (coverage p = 0.03), connectivity density (coverage p = 0.002), and SMI (coverage p = 0.015).

Conclusion: Quantitative trabecular bone evaluation emphasizes intrinsic structural differences between meniscus-covered/meniscus-uncovered tibias. Results offer insight into bone adaptation with meniscal tear and support the hypothesis that subchondral bone plate-connected bone density could be important in early subchondral bone adaptation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7658005PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00256-020-03517-6DOI Listing

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