Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, University of California-Los Angeles, CA 90095-6902, USA.
Am J Sports Med. 2011 Mar;39(3):506-10. doi: 10.1177/0363546510387507. Epub 2010 Dec 20.
Historically, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been very useful in diagnosing meniscal tears but not as valuable in predicting whether a meniscal tear is reparable. Given that several recent studies suggested that MRI can be used to predict tear reparability, the topic has resurfaced as a controversy in the orthopaedic and radiology literatures.
Experienced musculoskeletal radiologists can use MRI to predict the reparability of meniscal tears with good to excellent accuracy using the same arthroscopic criteria used by surgeons intraoperatively.
Cohort study (diagnosis); Level of evidence, 3.
Fifty-eight patients with meniscal tears treated with repair were matched by age and sex with 61 patients with tears treated with meniscectomy. Two senior musculoskeletal radiologists independently and blindly reviewed preoperative MRI of these 119 meniscal tears. Using established arthroscopic criteria, the radiologists were asked to grade each tear 0 to 4, with 1 point for each of the following: a tear larger than 10 mm, within 3 mm of the meniscosynovial junction, greater than 50% thickness, and with an intact inner meniscal fragment. Only a tear with a score of 4 would be predicted to be reparable.
The 2 radiologists' ability to correctly estimate reparability was poor, with 58.0% and 62.7% correct predictions (κ = 0.155 and 0.250, respectively). Interrater reliability assessment showed that the raters agreed on a score of 4 (reparable) versus <4 (not reparable) 73.7% of the time (κ = 0.434) but came to identical scores only 38.1% of the time (κ = 0.156). Determining the status of the inner fragment was the most predictive individual criterion and the only one to reach statistical significance (χ(2) = 14.9, P <.001).
Magnetic resonance imaging is not an effective or efficient predictor of reparability of meniscal tears with the current arthroscopic criteria.
从历史上看,磁共振成像(MRI)在诊断半月板撕裂方面非常有用,但在预测半月板撕裂是否可修复方面则没有那么有价值。鉴于最近有几项研究表明 MRI 可用于预测撕裂的可修复性,这个话题在矫形和放射学文献中再次成为争议。
经验丰富的肌肉骨骼放射科医生可以使用 MRI,根据外科医生术中使用的相同关节镜标准,准确地预测半月板撕裂的可修复性,具有良好到极好的准确性。
队列研究(诊断);证据水平,3 级。
对 58 例接受半月板修复治疗的半月板撕裂患者和 61 例接受半月板切除术治疗的半月板撕裂患者进行年龄和性别匹配。两位资深的肌肉骨骼放射科医生独立且盲法地对这 119 例半月板撕裂患者的术前 MRI 进行了评估。使用既定的关节镜标准,放射科医生被要求对每个撕裂进行 0 到 4 分的评分,其中 1 分对应以下情况:撕裂大于 10mm、距半月板关节缘 3mm 以内、大于 50%的厚度和有完整的内侧半月板碎片。只有评分达到 4 分的撕裂才被预测为可修复。
两位放射科医生正确估计可修复性的能力较差,正确预测率分别为 58.0%和 62.7%(κ=0.155 和 0.250)。评估者间可靠性评估显示,当评分达到 4 分(可修复)与 <4 分(不可修复)时,两位评估者有 73.7%的时间达成一致(κ=0.434),但只有 38.1%的时间达成相同的评分(κ=0.156)。确定内侧碎片的状态是最具预测性的个体标准,也是唯一达到统计学意义的标准(χ²=14.9,P<.001)。
使用当前的关节镜标准,MRI 不是一种有效的或有效的半月板撕裂可修复性预测方法。