The basic magnetic resonance (MR) imaging pattern of normal and degenerated hyaline articular cartilage was studied in vitro in 40 fresh bovine patellae. With the use of an ample spectrum of strongly T1- to T2-weighted sequences, two zones of cartilage with different signal intensities were observed in all specimens. A superficial cartilaginous layer in the MR image with higher water content and longer T1 and T2 correlated with the tangential and transitional zones of normal articular cartilage, whereas a second MR imaging zone with shorter T1 and T2 was identified in the depth of the articular cartilage. Different functional properties in pressure resistance were observed in the two layers. In early cartilage degeneration without thinning, there was increased hydration of the superficial cartilage layer. This study suggests that strongly T1- and T2-weighted images are indispensable for evaluating details in articular cartilage degeneration.
Sera from 150 women and 162 men with unexplained infertility were examined using a commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit for antisperm antibodies. The results were compared to those of the Friberg agglutination test, the post-coital test, the sperm-cervical mucus contact (SCMC) test and the pregnancy rate. We also tested follicular fluids obtained from 38 women who underwent in-vitro fertilization (IVF). These data were compared with those obtained in serum, post-coital test data and with the later development of the oocyte in IVF. Antibodies in follicular fluid were found only in women with antibodies circulating in serum. The correlation coefficient between these was 0.88 (P < 0.001). There was no correlation between antisperm antibodies in serum found with the ELISA test, and with the agglutination test, the post-coital test or the SCMC test. Neither was there any correlation between antibodies in follicular fluid and the post-coital test, the pregnancy rate or successful IVF.
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