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Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages 95-110 (February 2010)


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MR Imaging in Osteoarthritis: Hardware, Coils, and Sequences

Thomas M. Link, MDemail address

Whole-organ assessment of a joint with osteoarthritis (OA) requires tailored MR imaging hardware and imaging protocols to diagnose and monitor degenerative disease of the cartilage, menisci, bone marrow, ligaments, and tendons. Image quality benefits from increased field strength, and 3.0-T MR imaging is used increasingly for assessing joints with OA. Dedicated surface coils are required for best visualization of joints affected by OA, and the use of multichannel phased-array coils with parallel imaging improves image quality and/or shortens acquisition times. Sequences that best show morphologic abnormalities of the whole joint include intermediate-weighted fast-spin echo sequences. Also quantitative sequences have been developed to assess cartilage volume and thickness and to analyze cartilage biochemical composition.

Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University of California at San Francisco, 400 Parnassus Avenue, A-367, San Francisco, CA 94131, USA

 This article originally appeared in Radiologic Clinics of North America 2009;47(4):617–32.

PII: S1064-9689(09)00138-X

doi:10.1016/j.mric.2009.09.007


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