Abstract

BackgroundBone-cartilage mismatch is a variation in which the surface curvature of the articular cartilage is incongruent with the curvature of the underlying subchondral bone. The purpose of this study is to investigate the prevalence of this variant in the medial tibial plateau (MTP) and examine potential association with clinical findings and intra-articular derangements using MRI. MethodsA quantitative and qualitative retrospective analysis of 98 knee MRI studies was performed. Bone and cartilage depths of the MTP were measured to assess bone-cartilage morphology and classified into congruent (concave bone-concave cartilage) and incongruent (concave bone-convex cartilage) patterns. Associations between bone-cartilage mismatch and clinical findings and other MRI changes were assessed using Fisher’s exact test. ResultsBy quantitative assessment, four individuals (4%) had MTP incongruent morphology (bone-cartilage mismatch). The mean bone depth ± standard deviation (SD) was 2.3 ± 0.6 mm concave in the congruent group, and 1.4 ± 0.6 mm concave in the incongruent group. The mean cartilage depth ± SD was 0.7 ± 0.7 mm concave in the congruent group, and 0.9 ± 0.5 mm convex in the incongruent group. By qualitative assessment, three individuals (3%) had incongruent morphology. Although not statistically significant, a higher proportion of individuals (3 of 4; 75%) with incongruent cartilage demonstrated chondromalacia patellae compared to those with congruent cartilage (38 of 94; 40%). ConclusionBone-cartilage mismatch was present in 3–4% of the knees. Individuals with incongruent cartilage demonstrated a trend of a higher proportion of chondromalacia patellae. Larger studies are needed to evaluate this further.

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