To evaluate the differential features of acute and chronic tears of the anterior cruciate ligament at magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, the authors performed a retrospective evaluation of findings in 81 MR examinations correlated with results at arthroscopy. Intact anterior cruciate ligaments (ACLs) were present in 29 patients; acute complete ACL tears, in 22; and chronic complete ACL tears, in 30. Acute tears were accurately distinguished from intact ligaments and were characterized by the presence of edema. Chronic tears had a more variable appearance: Nine (30%) were depicted at MR as intact bands with low signal intensity that bridged the expected origin and insertion of the ACL. This appearance is likely due to the presence of bridging fibrous scars within the intercondylar notch. Five of these nine cases were correctly characterized as chronically torn because of the presence of focal angulation. In four of these nine cases the scarred fragments produced a relatively straight band that mimicked an intact ligament. Although chronic and acute ACL tears usually have distinct findings at MR, a chronic tear will occasionally be difficult to distinguish from an intact ligament.
The authors evaluated measurement of the degree of anterior subluxation ("translocation") of the tibia in regard to the femur as a predictor of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear. Eighty-nine magnetic resonance (MR) imaging studies of patients with either an arthroscopically confirmed intact (n = 29), acutely torn (n = 27), or chronically torn (n = 33) ACL were retrospectively reviewed. The degree of translocation was measured on hard-copy images by using two methods. Buckling of the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) was also evaluated. Anterior tibial translocation, when measured at the midsagittal plane of the lateral femoral condyle with regard to a plane parallel to the cephalocaudal axis of the image, was a relatively specific indicator of ACL disruption. Subluxation of 5 mm or more had 58% sensitivity, 93% specificity, and 69% accuracy for an ACL tear. All knees with subluxation of 7 mm or more had torn ACLs. Buckling of the PCL was less sensitive and less accurate than anterior translocation as an indicator of ACL disruption.
Approximately 1% of the total population referred for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the knee at our facility have cystic changes at or near the attachment of the anterior or posterior cruciate ligaments (ACL, PCL). Cases were collected prospectively from a group of 1710 consecutive knee MR examinations, and a retrospective study analyzed the typical appearance of these cysts and any associated findings. Although most of the cysts were an incidental finding, two were associated with significant adjacent marrow edema.
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