Abstract

Sixty patients with symptoms of chronic disease of the knee joint were evaluated with high-resolution, thin-section magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. MR imaging depicted a wide variety of knee joint abnormalities including osteochondritis dissecans, medullary infarcts, epiphyseal osteonecrosis, intraarticular osteochondral fragments, synovial cysts, joint effusions, intraarticular soft-tissue tumors, synovial disease, leukemic infiltration of bone marrow, Osgood-Schlatter disease, and nonossifying fibroma. In two cases MR imaging depicted bone infarcts not seen on both radionuclide bone scans and standard radiographs. The highly detailed depiction of the articular cartilage was of particular importance in predicting arthroscopic findings in cases of osteochondritis dissecans. In two cases, a soft-tissue mass (pigmented villonodular synovitis) and a large osteochondral fragment undetected at arthroscopy were accurately localized with MR imaging. The results indicate that MR imaging is capable of providing information that might otherwise require multiple, sometimes invasive diagnostic procedures.

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