The signal intensity patterns of rotator cuff lesions at magnetic resonance (MR) imaging were evaluated in 80 patients who had surgical correlation and in 13 asymptomatic individuals (14 shoulders). Six cadaver shoulders were examined with MR, and histologic correlation was obtained in four. All studies were performed at 1.5 T with a flexible circular surface coil. The accuracy of MR imaging in detection of full-thickness cuff tears (31 patients) was 0.95 and of partial thickness tears (16 patients), 0.84. The most common and accurate pattern for full-thickness cuff tears (22 of 31 tears) was a region of intense signal seen on T2-weighted images. Less often the torn region consisted of an extremely degenerated and attenuated tendon with moderate signal intensity or was obscured by low-signal-intensity scar. The intense signal pattern on T2-weighted images was also accurate, although a less common finding (seven of 16 cases), in the diagnosis of partial tears. Tendinitis was recognized as focal or diffuse regions of increased signal intensity or a nonhomogeneous pattern of increased signal often associated with tendinous enlargement. In some patients, manifestations of subacromial-subdeltoid bursitis was present. Tendon degeneration was also manifested as regions of increased signal intensity. Some similarity and overlap of signal patterns of partial interstitial tears, tendinitis, and tendon degeneration are observed.
Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the wrist was performed in 35 patients with specific complaints of pain and soft-tissue swelling in the medial side of the wrist. Twenty of the 35 subsequently underwent surgery. In 14 of the patients who underwent surgery, a diagnosis of triangular fibrocartilage (TFC) tear was made at MR imaging; in 13 of the 14 the tear was confirmed by surgical findings. In the six patients with an MR diagnosis of an intact TFC, surgical findings confirmed the diagnosis. These patients were operated on for an abnormality in the vicinity of the TFC (avascular necrosis, ganglion cyst, xanthoma). On the basis of findings from the 20 patients with surgical correlation, the accuracy of MR imaging in the detection of TFC tears was 95%. MR imaging is a valuable noninvasive method in the study of pathologic conditions of the TFC.
The pattern of FDG uptake within the shoulder may point to specific clinical entities. While focal uptake is less reliably related to clinical findings, diffuse uptake is associated with signs and symptoms of osteoarthritis or bursitis.
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