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Diagnostic performance of direct traction MR arthrography of the hip: detection of chondral and labral lesions with arthroscopic comparison

Authors :
Florian Schmaranzer
Andrea Klauser
Michael Kogler
Benjamin Henninger
Thomas Forstner
Markus Reichkendler
Ehrenfried Schmaranzer
Source :
European Radiology. 25:1721-1730
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2014.

Abstract

To assess diagnostic performance of traction MR arthrography of the hip in detection and grading of chondral and labral lesions with arthroscopic comparison.Seventy-five MR arthrograms obtained ± traction of 73 consecutive patients (mean age, 34.5 years; range, 14-54 years) who underwent arthroscopy were included. Traction technique included weight-adapted traction (15-23 kg), a supporting plate for the contralateral leg, and intra-articular injection of 18-27 ml (local anaesthetic and contrast agent). Patients reported on neuropraxia and on pain. Two blinded readers independently assessed femoroacetabular cartilage and labrum lesions which were correlated with arthroscopy. Interobserver agreement was calculated using κ values. Joint distraction ± traction was evaluated in consensus.No procedure had to be stopped. There were no cases of neuropraxia. Accuracy for detection of labral lesions was 92 %/93 %, 91 %/83 % for acetabular lesions, and 92 %/88 % for femoral cartilage lesions for reader 1/reader 2, respectively. Interobserver agreement was moderate (κ = 0.58) for grading of labrum lesions and substantial (κ = 0.7, κ = 0.68) for grading of acetabular and femoral cartilage lesions. Joint distraction was achieved in 72/75 and 14/75 hips with/without traction, respectively.Traction MR arthrography safely enabled accurate detection and grading of labral and chondral lesions.• The used traction technique was well tolerated by most patients. • The used traction technique almost consistently achieved separation of cartilage layers. • Traction MR arthrography enabled accurate detection of chondral and labral lesions.

Details

ISSN :
14321084 and 09387994
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Radiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0942462b07f6c59391a69d677e32759e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-014-3534-x