Abstract

Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is the most common paediatric rheumatic disease. It represents a group of heterogenous inflammatory disorders with unknown origin and is a diagnosis of exclusion in which imaging plays an important role. JIA is defined as arthritis of one or more joints that begins before the age of 16 years, persists for more than 6 weeks and is of unknown aetiology and pathophysiology. The clinical goal is early suppression of inflammation to prevent irreversible joint damage which has shifted the emphasis from detecting established joint damage to proactively detecting inflammatory change. This drives the need for imaging techniques that are more sensitive than conventional radiography in the evaluation of inflammatory processes as well as early osteochondral change. Physical examination has limited reliability, even if performed by an experienced clinician, emphasising the importance of imaging to aid in clinical decision-making. On behalf of the European Society of Musculoskeletal Radiology (ESSR) arthritis subcommittee and the European Society of Paediatric Radiology (ESPR) musculoskeletal imaging taskforce, based on literature review and/or expert opinion, we discuss paediatric-specific imaging characteristics of the most commonly involved, in literature best documented and clinically important joints in JIA, namely the temporomandibular joints (TMJs), spine, sacroiliac (SI) joints, wrists, hips and knees, followed by a clinically applicable point to consider for each joint. We will also touch upon controversies in the current literature that remain to be resolved with ongoing research.Key Points• Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is the most common chronic paediatric rheumatic disease and, in JIA imaging, is increasingly important to aid in clinical decision-making.• Conventional radiographs have a lower sensitivity and specificity for detection of disease activity and early destructive change, as compared to MRI or ultrasound. Nonetheless, radiography remains important, particularly in narrowing the differential diagnosis and evaluating growth disturbances.• Mainly in peripheral joints, ultrasound can be helpful for assessment of inflammation and guiding joint injections. In JIA, MRI is the most validated technique. MRI should be considered as the modality of choice to assess the axial skeleton or where the clinical presentation overlaps with JIA.

Highlights

  • Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is the most common paediatric rheumatic disease

  • magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) should be considered as the modality of choice to assess the axial skeleton or where the clinical presentation overlaps with JIA

  • MRI is the modality of choice for the assessment of temporomandibular joints (TMJs) arthritis as it can detect acute and early inflammatory changes consisting of joint effusion, synovial enhancement/thickening and bone marrow oedema, as well as chronic changes including erosions, osseous deformity, new bone formation and disc abnormalities [14]

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Summary

Temporomandibular joints

Temporomandibular joint (TMJ) involvement is common in children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), and it is often present early in the disease [1]. It has been implicated in 40– 87% of JIA patients on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) [2–6]. MRI is the modality of choice for the assessment of TMJ arthritis as it can detect acute and early inflammatory changes consisting of joint effusion, synovial enhancement/thickening and bone marrow oedema, as well as chronic changes including erosions, osseous deformity, new bone formation and disc abnormalities [14]. Point to consider TMJ MRI could be performed in patients suspected clinically of TMJ involvement, with fluid-sensitive, closed and open mouth, and potentially, post-gadolinium sequences. Radiography is not sensitive for detecting early joint changes [55]

TMJ Spine SI joint Wrist Hip Knee
Sacroiliac joints
Peripheral joints
Take care in interpretation of dynamic images
Conclusion
Findings
Compliance with ethical standards
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