Abstract

Fourteen freshly disarticulated knee specimens were studied to assess the usefulness of magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in the detection and correct staging of patellar chondral lesions. Axial and sagittal images were obtained; T1-weighted spin-echo sequences were found satisfactory for defining cartilage morphology. Specimens were sectioned and examined grossly for cartilage changes such as softening, blistering, fibrillation, fissuring, and frank subchondral bone exposure. In a side-by-side comparison, all lesions classified grossly in the Shahriaree system as stage II or higher showed MR changes. Stage I changes could not be identified in disarticulated specimens. Stage III lesions showed cartilage irregularity (ulceration) or a loss of the normal, sharply defined margin between coapted cartilage, which represented "crabmeat" fibrillation. Stage IV lesions showed ulceration to bone, sometimes with subchondral bone changes. In this in vitro, preliminary study, MR imaging was found to be an accurate means for detecting and staging moderate and advanced patellar cartilage lesions.

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