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MRI to determine features of osteoarthrosis
The study consisted of 96 patients (53 women, 43 men), 51 with knee osteoarthrosis, and 44 patients with knee pain following an injury and no history of knee osteoarthrosis who underwent MRI. "The patients were graded on the severity of knee osteoarthrosis on radiographs and the severity of abnormalities of the LCLC components on MRI," said Yung-Hsin Chen, MD, of Johns Hopkins Hospital and lead author of the study. The study showed that LCLC abnormalities were identified in 88% of the patients with OA in comparison to 12% of patients without OA. The study revealed that lateral compartment osteoarthrosis was significantly linked to abnormalities in the fibular collateral ligament. Caution should be given to the interpretation of LCLC abnormalities, as they should not be incorrectly attributed to an acute atraumatic injury, say the study authors. "The results of the findings will help to explain some of the common finding we come across in day to day radiology in patients with osteoarthritis," said Dr. Chen. The full results of this study will be presented on Thursday, May 10, 2007 during the American Roentgen Ray Societys annual meeting in Orlando, FL. Posted by: Jenn Source |
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