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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 127 - 127
1 May 2016
Emmanuel K Wirth W Hochreiter J Eckstein F
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Purpose

It is well known that meniscus extrusion is associated with structural progression of knee OA. However, it is unknown whether medial meniscus extrusion promotes cartilage loss in specific femorotibial subregions, or whether it is associated with a increase in cartilage thickness loss throughout the entire femorotibial compartment. We applied quantitative MRI-based measurements of subregional cartilage thickness (change) and meniscus position, to address the above question in knees with and without radiographic joint space narrowing (JSN).

Methods

60 participants with unilateral medial OARSI JSN grade 1–3, and contralateral knee OARSI JSN grade 0 were drawn from the Osteoarthritis Initiative. Manual segmentation of the medial tibial and weight-bearing medial femoral cartilage was performed, using baseline and 1-year follow-up sagittal double echo steady-state (DESS) MRI, and proprietary software (Chondrometrics GmbH, Ainring, Germany). Segmentation of the entire medial meniscus was performed with the same software, using baseline coronal DESS images. Longitudinal cartilage loss was computed for 5 tibial (central, external, internal, anterior, posterior) and 3 femoral (central, external, internal) subregions. Meniscus position was determined as the % area of the entire meniscus extruding the tibial plateau medially and the distance between the external meniscus border and the tibial cartilage in an image located 4mm posterior to the central image (a location commonly used for semi-quantitative meniscus scoring). The relationship between meniscus position and cartilage loss was assessed using Pearson (r) correlation coefficients, for knees with JSN and without JSN.