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28 results on '"Metacarpophalangeal Joint diagnostic imaging"'

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1. Radiographic features and subtypes of congenital thumb duplication type C3 according to Wu et al. and their potential implications for surgical management: new classification and preliminary results.

2. Unveiling a foreign body masquerading as periarticular calcification: a case report.

3. Subclinical joint inflammation in rheumatoid arthritis: comparing thermal and ultrasound imaging at the metacarpophalangeal joint.

4. Role of inflammatory burden and treatment on joint space width in psoriatic arthritis-a high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography study.

5. Evidence for the presence of synovial sheaths surrounding the extensor tendons at the metacarpophalangeal joints: a microscopy study.

6. Bone erosion in the 2nd metacarpophalangeal head: association with its bone mineral density by HR-pQCT in rheumatoid arthritis patients.

7. Ultrasound diagnosis and follow-up of a locked thumb metacarpophalangeal joint caused by radial sesamoid entrapment: a case report.

8. A case with Behçet's disease involving erosive Metacarpophalangeal joint arthritis: the value of ultrasonography in the diagnosis of an Erosion.

9. The utility of multi-stack alignment and 3D longitudinal image registration to assess bone remodeling in rheumatoid arthritis patients from second generation HR-pQCT scans.

10. The relation between physical joint examination and MRI-depicted inflammation of metatarsophalangeal joints in early arthritis.

11. A search to the target tissue in which RA-specific inflammation starts: a detailed MRI study to improve identification of RA-specific features in the phase of clinically suspect arthralgia.

12. Reliability of ultrasonography to detect inflammatory lesions and structural damage in juvenile idiopathic arthritis.

13. An automated algorithm for the detection of cortical interruptions and its underlying loss of trabecular bone; a reproducibility study.

14. Assessment of 3-month changes in bone microstructure under anti-TNFα therapy in patients with rheumatoid arthritis using high-resolution peripheral quantitative computed tomography (HR-pQCT).

15. Radiographic damage in hands and wrists of patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis after 29 years of disease duration.

16. Body mass index and extent of MRI-detected inflammation: opposite effects in rheumatoid arthritis versus other arthritides and asymptomatic persons.

17. A pilot investigation of the prevalence of US-detectable forefoot joint pathology and reported foot-related disability in participants with systemic lupus erythematosus.

18. Visual detection of cortical breaks in hand joints: reliability and validity of high-resolution peripheral quantitative CT compared to microCT.

19. Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging of metacarpophalangeal joints reflects histological signs of synovitis in rheumatoid arthritis.

20. Quantitative assessment of synovitis in patients with rheumatoid arthritis using fluorescence optical imaging.

21. Chondrocalcinosis is common in the absence of knee involvement.

22. Ultrasound of metacarpophalangeal joints is a sensitive and reliable endpoint for drug therapies in rheumatoid arthritis: results of a randomized, two-center placebo-controlled study.

23. Feasibility of a standardized ultrasound examination in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a quality improvement among rheumatologists cohort.

24. Bone mineral density by digital X-ray radiogrammetry is strongly decreased and associated with joint destruction in long-standing rheumatoid arthritis: a cross-sectional study.

25. Transforming growth factor β 869C/T and interleukin 6 -174G/C polymorphisms relate to the severity and progression of bone-erosive damage detected by ultrasound in rheumatoid arthritis.

26. Are bone erosions detected by magnetic resonance imaging and ultrasonography true erosions? A comparison with computed tomography in rheumatoid arthritis metacarpophalangeal joints.

27. Ultrasonography of the metacarpophalangeal and proximal interphalangeal joints in rheumatoid arthritis: a comparison with magnetic resonance imaging, conventional radiography and clinical examination.

28. Conventional radiography requires a MRI-estimated bone volume loss of 20% to 30% to allow certain detection of bone erosions in rheumatoid arthritis metacarpophalangeal joints.

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