Jin Zuo1, Sharmila Majumdar1,
Xiaojuan Li1
1Radiology and Biomedical Imaging,
Univ. of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States
Anterior
cruciate ligament (ACL) tear is a common knee injury, and is a risk factor of
post-traumatic osteoarthritis (OA). The disease is frequently associated with
bone marrow edema-like (BMEL) lesions which exhibit as an area of high signal
intensity in T2-weighted, fat-saturated fast spin echo MR images. BMEL is
also commonly seen in OA and has been associated with disease progression and
pain in OA. However, the knowledge on the pathophyisiology and significance
of BMEL in ACL-injured knees is very limited. Dynamic contrast enhanced MRI
(DCE-MRI) can probe bone marrow and subchondral bone perfusion as well as
fluid dynamics. Impaired perfusion in bone may lead to cartilage
degeneration. A recent study showed bone marrow abnormalities were associated
with BME in OA. The aim of this study is to apply DCE MRI to evaluate bone
marrow perfusion in patients with ACL tears, and to compare the perfusion
patterns between BMEL region and normal appearing bone marrow region.