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Musculoskele tal Osteonecrosis & Osteochondrosis

Diagnostic Imaging of Osteonecrosis & Osteochondrosis

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Page 1: Diagnostic Imaging of Osteonecrosis & Osteochondrosis

MusculoskeletalOsteonecrosis & Osteochondrosis

Page 2: Diagnostic Imaging of Osteonecrosis & Osteochondrosis

Mohamed Zaitoun

Assistant Lecturer-Diagnostic Radiology Department , Zagazig University Hospitals

EgyptFINR (Fellowship of Interventional

Neuroradiology)[email protected]

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Knowing as much as possible about your enemy precedes successful battle

and learning about the disease process precedes successful management

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Osteonecrosis (Avascular Necrosis)a) Incidenceb) Etiologyc) Radiographic Featuresd) Special Types

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a) Incidence :-Osteonecrosis (avascular necrosis, ischemic

necrosis, aseptic necrosis) may be caused by two mechanisms

1-Interruption of arterial supply2-Intra / extraosseous venous insufficiency-The pathophysiology of all osteonecrosis is the

same : ischemia → revascularization → repair → deformity → osteoarthrosis

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b) Etiology :1-Trauma (fracture or dislocation)2-Dislocation 3-Collagen vascular disease4-Sickle cell disease5-Gaucher's disease6-Caisson disease7-Radiation 8-Pancreatitis, alcoholism9-Hormonal (steroids, Cushing's disease)10-Idiopathic (Legg-Calve-Perthes disease) 11-Pregnancy

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c) Radiographic Features :1-Plain Radiography :-In general there is initial minor osteopaenia,

followed by variable density-Gradually microfractures accumulate in the dead

bone, which is unable to repair leading to collapse of the articular surface and the crescent sign of AVN

-Eventually the cortex collapses and fragments, with superimposed secondary degenerative change

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Subchondral fracture (crescent sign)

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2-MRI :-MRI is the most sensitive (95%) modality and

demonstrates changes well before plain film changes are visible

-The progression is:a) Diffuse edemab) Focal serpiginous low signal line with fatty center

(most common appearance)c) Double line sign on T2 is diagnosticd) Osteochondral fragmentation: rim signe) Secondary degenerative change•

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*Osteonecrosis in brief :1-Kienbock disease : lunate2-Preiser’s Disease : scaphoid3-Legg-Calve-Perthes : femoral head4-Kohler’s Disease : navicular bone5-Frieberg's Disease : metatarsal head6-Kummel’s Disease : vertebral body

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d) Special Types :(i) Upper Limb :1-Kienbock disease (Osteonecrosis of the

lunate) :-Sclerotic lunate on plain radiography-Sclerosis (low T1 and T2)

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T1 T2

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2-Preiser’s Disease : (Osteonecrosis of the scaphoid) :

-As before

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(ii) Lower Limb :1-Legg-Calve-Perthes (Osteonecrosis of

femoral head) : school age (5-8 years) a) Incidenceb) Radiographic Features

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a) Incidence :-Osteonecrosis of femoral head-School age (5-8 years)

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b) Radiographic Features :-Plain film staging system (Ficat) :*Stage I : clinical symptoms of AVN but no

radiographic findings*Stage II : osteoporosis, cystic areas and

osteosclerosis*Stage III : translucent subcortical fracture line

(crescent sign) , flattening of femoral head*Stage IV : loss of bone contour with secondary

osteoarthritis  

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Stage II

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AP pelvic radiography showing flattening of the superolateral aspect (the weightbearing portion) of the right femoral head, there is a zone of decreased density representing the crescent sign, indicating subchondral fracture (stage III)

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AP radiographic view of the pelvis shows flattening of the outer portion of the right femoral head from avascular necrosis, with adjacent joint space narrowing, juxta-articular sclerosis, and osteophytes representing degenerative joint disease (stage IV)

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-Early signs :1-Asymmetrical femoral epiphyseal size

(smaller on affected side)2-Apparent increased density of the femoral

head epiphysis3-Widening of the medial joint space4-Blurring of the physeal plate

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-Late signs :1-The femoral head begins to fragment with

subchondral lucency (crescent sign) 2-Femoral head deformity with widening and

flattening3-Osteoarthritis

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Bilateral Perthes

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Bilateral

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2-MRI :-Earliest sign is bone marrow edema (nonspecific)-Early AVN : focal subchondral abnormalities (very

specific):Dark band on T1, bright band on T2Double-line sign (T2) : bright inner band / dark outer

band occurs later in disease process after the start of osseous repair (inner bright line representing granulation tissue and an outer dark line representing sclerotic bone)

-Late AVN : fibrosis of subchondral bone :Dark on T1 and T2Femoral head collapse

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Bilateral AVN, (a) T1, (b) T2

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T1 T2

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-Mitchell classification :*Class A (early disease) : signal intensity

analogous to fat (high on T1 and intermediate on T2)

*Class B : signal intensity analogous to blood (high on T1 and T2)

*Class C : signal intensity analogous to fluid (low on T1 and high on T2)

*Class D (late disease) : signal intensity analogous to fibrous tissue (low on T1 and T2)

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Coronal T1 of the pelvis in a patient with bilateral avascular necrosis of the femoral head shows increased signal within the superior aspect of the femoral head, representing fat, surrounded by a line of decresed signal, representing sclerotic reactive margin, this is an MRI class A (fatlike)

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Patient 39 years old with use of high dose of corticosteroids, Cor T1 and T2 of the pelvis shows a stage B (blood-like) at the level of right femoral head with increased signal on T1W and T2W; AVN stage C (fluid-like) in left femoral head, with decreased signal intensity on T1W and increased signal on T2

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Cor T1 and T2 in a patient with AVN on the left femoral head with decresed signal intensity on T1 and T2, representing a stage D (fibrous-like)

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2-Kohler’s Disease (Osteonecrosis of the navicular bone) :

-As before

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Normal navicular bone

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3-Frieberg's Disease (Osteonecrosis of the Metatarsal head) :-Osteonecrosis of the distal end of the 2nd (75%) or 3rd (25%)

metatarsal-Bilateral in 10% of patients-The only osteonecrosis more frequent in females (75%)-Early :*Flattening and cystic lesions of the affected metatarsal head*Widening of the metatarsophalangeal (MTP) joint-Late :*Sclerosis and flattening of the bone-MRI : as before

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(iii) Spine :-Kummel’s Disease (Osteonecrosis of the

vertebral body) :-Collapse of affected vertebrae

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Osteochondrosis-Abnormal bone and cartilage at the end of bone-The term is a catch-all term referring to a

spectrum of diseases : a) Abnormal endochondral ossification

secondary to repeated stress without osteonecrosis :

1-Scheuermann's disease : spine2-Osgood-Schlatter disease : tibial tubercle3-Blount's disease : tibial epiphysis

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b) Osteonecrosis disease :1-Kienbock disease : lunate2-Preiser’s Disease : scaphoid3-Legg-Calve-Perthes : femoral head4-Kohler’s Disease : navicular bone5-Frieberg's Disease : metatarsal head6-Kummel’s Disease : vertebral body

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a) Abnormal endochondral ossification secondary to repeated stress without osteonecrosis :

1-Scheuermann's disease : spine2-Osgood-Schlatter disease : tibial tubercle3-Blount's disease : tibial epiphysis

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1-Scheuermann Disease (Juvenile Kyphosis) (Vertebral apophyses) :

-Common condition which results in kyphosis of the thoracic or thoracolumbar spine

-Diagnostic criteria :*Thoracic spine kyphosis > 40 deg (normal 25-40

deg) or*Thoracolumbar spine kyphosis > 30 deg (normal 0

deg) and*At least 3 adjacent vertebrae demonstrating wedging

of > 5 degrees

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-Plain Radiography :*Progressive narrowing of disk spaces*Wedging of the anterior portion of vertebral

bodies*Irregularity of endplates*Changes seen in >3 vertebral bodies*Multiple Schmorl's nodes

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Wedge shaped vertebrae

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2-Osgood-Schlatter Disease (Tibial tubercle) :-Secondary to repeated trauma to deep fibers of

patellar tendon-Male : female = 5 : 1-25% are bilateral-Irregular tibial tuberosity-Thickening of patellar tendon, soft tissue swelling

around patellar ligament

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3-Blount’s Disease : (Congenital tibia vara), (Proximal medial tibial epiphysis)

-The tibial shaft is in varus position (Tibiofemoral angle > 15 degrees) and the epiphysis is wedge-shaped, fragmented or can appear absent

-The adjacent metaphysis is also depressed and has a beak-like protuberance of rarified bone oriented medially, this causes the metaphyseal diaphyseal angle (MDA) of Drennan to increase (typically more than 11 degrees)

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b) Osteonecrosis disease :1-Kienbock disease : lunate2-Preiser’s Disease : scaphoid3-Legg-Calve-Perthes : femoral head4-Kohler’s Disease : navicular bone5-Frieberg's Disease : metatarsal head6-Kummel’s Disease : vertebral body-See before

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