Griffith James F, Leung Cynthia T P, Lee Jeremiah C H, Leung Jason C S, Yeung David K W, Yung Patrick S H
Department of Imaging and Interventional Radiology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
Jockey Club Centre for Osteoporosis Care and Control, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
Eur Radiol. 2023 Mar;33(3):1553-1564. doi: 10.1007/s00330-022-09198-0. Epub 2022 Nov 9.
This study uses a practical positional MRI protocol to evaluate tibiofemoral translation and rotation in normal and injured knees.
Following ethics approval, positional knee MRI of both knees was performed at 35° flexion, extension, and hyperextension in 34 normal subjects (mean age 31.1 ± 10 years) and 51 knee injury patients (mean age 36.4 ± 11.5 years, ACL tear n = 23, non-ACL injury n = 28). At each position, tibiofemoral translation and rotation were measured.
Normal knees showed 8.1 ± 3.3° external tibial rotation (i.e., compatible with physiological screw home mechanism) in hyperextension. The unaffected knee of ACL tear patients showed increased tibial anterior translation laterally (p = 0.005) and decreased external rotation (p = 0.002) in hyperextension compared to normal knees. ACL-tear knees had increased tibial anterior translation laterally (p < 0.001) and decreased external rotation (p < 0.001) compared to normal knees. Applying normal thresholds, fifteen (65%) of 23 ACL knees had excessive tibial anterior translation laterally while 17 (74%) had limited external rotation. None (0%) of 28 non-ACL-injured knees had excessive tibial anterior translation laterally while 13 (46%) had limited external rotation. Multidirectional malalignment was much more common in ACL-tear knees.
Positional MRI shows (a) physiological tibiofemoral movement in normal knees, (b) aberrant tibiofemoral alignment in the unaffected knee of ACL tear patients, and (c) a high frequency of abnormal tibiofemoral malalignment in injured knees which was more frequent, more pronounced, more multidirectional, and of a different pattern in ACL-tear knees than non-ACL-injured knees.
• Positional MRI shows physiological tibiofemoral translation and rotation in normal knees. • Positional MRI shows a different pattern of tibiofemoral alignment in the unaffected knee of ACL tear patients compared to normal control knees. • Positional MRI shows a high prevalence of abnormal tibiofemoral alignment in injured knees, which is more frequent and pronounced in ACL-tear knees than in ACL-intact injured knees.
本研究采用一种实用的定位MRI方案来评估正常及受伤膝关节的胫股关节平移和旋转情况。
在获得伦理批准后,对34名正常受试者(平均年龄31.1±10岁)和51名膝关节损伤患者(平均年龄36.4±11.5岁,其中前交叉韧带撕裂23例,非前交叉韧带损伤28例)的双膝关节在35°屈曲、伸直和过伸位进行定位MRI检查。在每个位置测量胫股关节的平移和旋转。
正常膝关节在过伸位时显示胫骨外旋8.1±3.3°(即符合生理性螺旋归位机制)。与正常膝关节相比,前交叉韧带撕裂患者未受伤的膝关节在过伸位时胫骨外侧向前平移增加(p = 0.005),外旋减少(p = 0.002)。与正常膝关节相比,前交叉韧带撕裂的膝关节胫骨外侧向前平移增加(p < 0.001),外旋减少(p < 0.001)。应用正常阈值,23例前交叉韧带损伤膝关节中有15例(65%)胫骨外侧向前平移过度,17例(74%)外旋受限。28例非前交叉韧带损伤的膝关节中无一例(0%)胫骨外侧向前平移过度,13例(46%)外旋受限。多方向排列不齐在前交叉韧带撕裂的膝关节中更为常见。
定位MRI显示(a)正常膝关节中胫股关节的生理性运动,(b)前交叉韧带撕裂患者未受伤膝关节中胫股关节排列异常,以及(c)受伤膝关节中胫股关节排列异常的发生率较高,前交叉韧带撕裂的膝关节比非前交叉韧带损伤的膝关节更频繁、更明显、多方向且模式不同。
• 定位MRI显示正常膝关节中胫股关节的生理性平移和旋转。• 与正常对照膝关节相比,定位MRI显示前交叉韧带撕裂患者未受伤膝关节中胫股关节排列模式不同。• 定位MRI显示受伤膝关节中胫股关节排列异常的发生率较高,前交叉韧带撕裂的膝关节比前交叉韧带完整的受伤膝关节更频繁、更明显。