MRI Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about MRI, including details on magnetic resonance imaging, neuroimaging, brain tumors. | ||||||||
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MRI description of knee medial collateral ligament abnormalities in the absence of trauma: edema related to osteoarthritis and medial meniscal tears.Wen DY, Propeck T, Kane SM, Godbee MT, Rall KL Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, MO 65212, USA. wend@health.missouri.edu A retrospective case series regarding the knees of 12 adult patients with MRI abnormalities of the medial collateral ligament (MCL), but without clinical history of trauma to the MCL, were collected and compared with six knee MR images from patients with clinical traumatic injuries to their MCLs. The MR images were studied for the extent of edema of the MCL, as well as other associated findings. Edema of the MCL on MRI could be found in three distinct categories of patients: (a) those with trauma to the MCL, which was an expected finding; (b) those without trauma but with medial compartment osteoarthritis; and (c) those without trauma but with degenerative medial meniscal tears. The clinical significance, if any, of the edema found in MCLs without trauma remains unclear. Atraumatic MCL edema may serve as a marker for medial knee compartment osteoarthritis or for a degenerative medial meniscal tear and should not be confused with traumatically induced MCL injuries, although this distinction can often be difficult to make based on MRI findings alone. Published 5 February 2007 in Magn Reson Imaging, 25(2): 209-14.
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