Impaction syndromes related to ulnar-sided pain include ulnar impaction syndrome, ulnar impingement syndrome, ulnocarpal impaction syndrome secondary to nonunion of the ulnar styloid process, ulnar styloid impaction syndrome, and hamatolunate impingement syndrome. The most common of these, ulnar impaction syndrome, is a degenerative condition of the ulnar side of the wrist related to excessive load bearing across the ulnar carpus, triangular fibrocartilage (TFC) complex, and ulnar head. In an adequate clinical setting, characteristic osseous findings at radiography include positive ulnar variance in ulnar impaction syndrome, a short ulna in ulnar impingement syndrome, nonunion of the ulnar styloid process in ulnar impaction syndrome secondary to ulnar styloid nonunion, an excessively long ulnar styloid process in ulnar styloid impaction syndrome, and type II lunate bone in hamatolunate impingement syndrome. Nevertheless, confirmation of clinical and conventional radiographic findings with magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is often necessary to exclude other entities with similar clinical manifestations. MR imaging allows earlier detection of an abnormality in the TFC complex, cartilage, or bone marrow of carpal bones and is helpful in formulating the extensive differential diagnosis in patients with ulnar wrist pain and limitation of motion.
Synovial plicae are normal anatomic structures of the knee that sometimes become symptomatic. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and MR arthrography are useful tools in the evaluation of synovial plicae and allow differentiation of these entities from other causes of knee pain. At MR imaging, synovial plicae appear as bands of low signal intensity within the high-signal-intensity joint fluid. Gradient-echo T2-weighted and fat-suppressed T2-weighted or proton density-weighted MR images are optimal for the evaluation of plicae. Plica syndrome, the painful impairment of knee function in which the only finding that helps explain the symptoms is the presence of a thickened and fibrotic plica, should be included in the differential diagnosis of internal derangement of the knee. A diffusely thickened synovial plica, perhaps associated with synovitis or erosion of the articular cartilage of the patella or femoral condyle, in a patient with no other significant MR imaging findings suggests the diagnosis of plica syndrome. Once the diagnosis has been made, nonsurgical treatment is preferable initially. Failure of the patient to improve with conservative treatment leaves arthroscopic excision of the pathologic plica as the treatment of choice.
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