Abstract

To assess the normal topographical variation of T2 relaxation time of articular cartilage in different compartments of the knee joint and at different tissue depths in young healthy adults. Twenty asymptomatic young adult volunteers (age range, 21-27 years; mean age, 22.5 years), were studied at 1.5T. Both axial and sagittal multi-slice multi-echo spin echo measurements were performed to determine the T2 relaxation time of cartilage in the femoral, tibial and patellar compartments. The cartilage surfaces were divided into 24 segments and each segment was divided into deep and superficial regions-of-interest (ROIs) of equal thickness. The reproducibility for ROI analysis was assessed for five patients by determining the interclass correlation coefficient (ICC) and the root-mean-square coefficient of variation (CV(RMS)). Cartilage T2 was significantly dependent on joint topography, compartment and tissue depth. For all joint surfaces, superficial T2 values were systematically higher as compared to deep tissue. The data showed a trend toward higher T2 values at the load bearing area of the femoral condyles. The interobserver error varied significantly among different locations and showed mostly good reproducibility with mean ICC of 0.70 and a CV(RMS) of 5.0%. The normal variation in cartilage T2 within a joint is significant and should be acknowledged when pathology-related T2 changes are investigated. The knowledge on normal variation can be used for power and sample size calculations in further studies, and the T2 values as control data in future patient studies.

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