At 5 years, young athletes with LROM of the hip showed increased progressive degenerative changes on MRI and radiographs compared with matched controls. Although the majority of these participants remained asymptomatic, those with features of FAI had radiographic findings consistent with early osteoarthritis. These outcomes suggest that more aggressive screening and counseling of young active patients may be helpful to prevent hip osteoarthritis in those with FAI.
BackgroundTo determine whether virtual surgical planning and three‐dimensional printed cutting guides (3D/VSP) improved radiographic bone union compared to conventional methods (CM) in fibula free flap (FFF) reconstruction of the mandibles.MethodsRetrospective study from the years 2000–2018 at a tertiary hospital. Osseous union was evaluated by a radiologist blinded to each patient's treatment.ResultsTwo hundred sixty patients who underwent FFF tissue transfer, 28 with VSP and 3D cutting guides. Bony union was not achieved in 46 (20%) patients who underwent CM compared to 1 (4%) of patients with VSP and guides (p = 0.036). FFF complication was significantly higher in CM with 87 patients (38%) compared to three patients (11%) in 3D/VSP (p = 0.005). Median time to bony union for patients who underwent CM was 1.4 years compared to 0.8 years in 3D/VSP.Conclusions3D/VSP reduced the rate of radiographic nonunion and flap‐related complications in FFF reconstruction for mandibular defects.
DECT knee images with oblique sagittal reconstructions using either mixed kV or bone removal displays (either DECT or SE) depict ACL disruption in the subacute or chronic setting with reliable identification by musculoskeletal radiologists.
Background
MR image intensity nonuniformity is often observed at 7T. Reference scans from the body coil used for uniformity correction at lower field strengths are typically not available at 7T.
Purpose
To evaluate the efficacy of a novel algorithm, Uniform Combined Reconstruction (UNICORN), to correct receive coil‐induced nonuniformity in musculoskeletal 7T MRI without the use of a reference scan.
Study Type
Retrospective image analysis study.
Subjects
MRI data of 20 subjects was retrospectively processed offline.
Field Strength/Sequence: Knees of 20 subjects were imaged at 7T with a single‐channel transmit, 28‐channel phased‐array receive knee coil. A turbo‐spin‐echo sequence was used to acquire 33 series of images.
Assessment
Three fellowship‐trained musculoskeletal radiologists with cumulative experience of 42 years reviewed the images. The uniformity, contrast, signal‐to‐noise ratio (SNR), and overall image quality were evaluated for images with no postprocessing, images processed with N4 bias field correction algorithm, and the UNICORN algorithm.
Statistical Tests
Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was used for measuring the interrater reliability. ICC and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated using the R statistical package employing a two‐way mixed‐effects model based on a mean rating (k = 3) for absolute agreement. The Wilcoxon signed‐rank test with continuity correction was used for analyzing the overall image quality scores.
Results
UNICORN was preferred among the three methods evaluated for uniformity in 97.9% of the pooled ratings, with excellent interrater agreement (ICC of 0.98, CI 0.97–0.99). UNICORN was also rated better than N4 for contrast and equivalent to N4 in SNR with ICCs of 0.80 (CI 0.72–0.86) and 0.67 (CI 0.54–0.77), respectively. The overall image quality scores for UNICORN were significantly higher than N4 (P < 6 × 10‐13), with good to excellent interrater agreement (ICC 0.90, CI 0.86–0.93).
Data Conclusion
Without the use of a reference scan, UNICORN provides better image uniformity, contrast, and overall image quality at 7T compared with the N4 bias field‐correction algorithm.
Level of Evidence: 4
Technical Efficacy: Stage 1
J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2019;50:1534–1544.
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