2018
DOI: 10.1148/rg.2017170112
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MR Imaging of Atraumatic Muscle Disorders

Abstract: Atraumatic disorders of skeletal muscles include congenital variants; inherited myopathies; acquired inflammatory, infectious, or ischemic disorders; neoplastic diseases; and conditions leading to muscle atrophy. These have overlapping appearances at magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and are challenging for the radiologist to differentiate. The authors organize muscle disorders into four MR imaging patterns: (a) abnormal anatomy with normal signal intensity, (b) edema/inflammation, (c) mass, and (d) atrophy, hig… Show more

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Cited by 66 publications
(60 citation statements)
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“…In chronic cases, fatty replacement occurs, resulting in the return of low signal intensity on fluid-sensitive sequences [8]. In CTS, thinning of thenar muscles is a valuable sign indicating chronic denervation atrophy in both MRI and US imaging.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In chronic cases, fatty replacement occurs, resulting in the return of low signal intensity on fluid-sensitive sequences [8]. In CTS, thinning of thenar muscles is a valuable sign indicating chronic denervation atrophy in both MRI and US imaging.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pathogenesis Myonecrosis refers to infarction of skeletal muscle. The most common etiologies include trauma (crush injury), compartment syndrome, prolonged immobilization, poorly controlled diabetes, radiotherapy, sickle cell crisis, or toxin (snake bite) [105]. Myoglobinemia (rhabdomyolysis) is a complication of acute muscle infarction.…”
Section: Myonecrosismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Imaging Radiographs and CT demonstrate muscle mineralization and ossification. On MR, muscle edema, fat infiltration, and atrophy are related to disease activity, severity, and chronicity [105]. By depicting appendicular and axial muscle, whole-body MR can estimate the extent and distribution of myositis as well as treatment response.…”
Section: Myopathymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…11 Because radiographic change usually precedes the presentation of symptoms, close observation would be required. When radiologic findings representing muscle edema such as increased T2 signal with bandlike demarcation from nonirradiated tissue in magnetic resonance image after high dose RT is shown, 17 one should consider the possibility of radiation myositis and early intervention may be warranted.…”
Section: A B Cmentioning
confidence: 99%