The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
ORCID: 0000-0002-0068-3679Publishes on Gastric Cancer Management and Outcomes, Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment, Intraperitoneal and Appendiceal Malignancies. 168 papers and 1.7k citations.
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Although magnetic resonance (MR) imaging has been used to evaluate many musculoskeletal lesions, the MR appearance of pigmented villonodular synovitis (PVNS) has not been described in detail. The authors describe two cases of PVNS in the knee imaged with both computed tomography and MR. In both cases parts of each lesion had very low signal intensity on both short repetition time (TR)/echo time (TE) sequences and long TR/TE sequences. Other portions of both lesions had intermediate signal intensity (equal to or higher than that of muscle but lower than that of fat) on short TR/TE sequences and increasing signal intensity on longer TR/TE images. In one case, the lesion also had a cystic component that showed MR changes typical of complex fluid. The authors propose that the MR signal characteristics demonstrated in these cases may be explained by the unique tissue components of the lesion, particularly hemosiderin and fat.
Improved technology and the development of high-resolution transducers have made sonography of the structures of the musculoskeletal system possible. The vast majority of scientific reports on the value of sonography for imaging musculoskeletal abnormalities have been written only in the last decade. Sonography has several inherent advantages: it is relatively inexpensive, allows comparison with the opposite normal side, uses no radiation, and can be performed at bedside or in the operating room if necessary. The advent of MR imaging has revolutionized musculoskeletal imaging and may be used in many instances rather than sonography for evaluating the same abnormalities or anatomic structures. It is important, however, to keep in perspective what the different imaging techniques have to offer, and, if one is just as efficacious as the other, the least invasive and least expensive should be chosen whenever possible. The goal of this article is to review the applications of sonography to the evaluation of musculoskeletal disorders including tendon disease, soft-tissue masses, identification of foreign bodies, osteomyelitis, cellulitis, and certain joint abnormalities.