MRI in patients with chronic pubalgia: Is precise useful information provided to the surgeon? A case-control study.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_F43FC215EFD9
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
MRI in patients with chronic pubalgia: Is precise useful information provided to the surgeon? A case-control study.
Journal
Orthopaedics & traumatology, surgery & research : OTSR
ISSN
1877-0568 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1877-0568
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/10/2016
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
102
Number
6
Pages
747-754
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Recent studies described that MRI is a good examination to assess damage in chronic athletic pubalgia (AP). However, to our knowledge, no studies focus on systematic correlation of precise tendon or parietal lesion in MRI with surgery and histological assessment. Therefore, we performed a case-control study to determine if MRI can precisely assess Adductor longus (AL) tendinopathy and parietal lesion, compared with surgery and histology.
MRI can determine if AP comes from pubis symphysis, musculotendinous or inguinal orifice structures.
Eighteen consecutive patients were enrolled from November 2011 to April 2013 for chronic AP. To constitute a control group, we also enrolled 18 asymptomatic men. All MRI were reviewed in consensus by 2 skeletal radiologists for pubic symphysis, musculotendinous, abdominal wall assessment and compared to surgery and histology findings.
Regarding pubis symphysis, we found 4 symmetric bone marrow oedema (14%), 2 secondary cleft (7%) and 2 superior ligaments lesions (7%). For AL tendon, we mainly found 13 asymmetric bone marrow oedema (46%), 15 hyperaemia (54%). Regarding abdominal wall, the deep inguinal orifice size in the group of symptomatic athletes and the control group was respectively 27.3±6.4mm and 23.8±6.3mm. The correlation between MRI and surgery/histology was low: 20% for the AL tendon and 9% for the abdominal wall. If we chose the criteria "affected versus unaffected", this correlation became higher: 100% for AL tendon and 73% for the abdominal wall.
MRI chronic athletic pubalgia concerns preferentially AL tendinopathy and deep inguinal canal dehiscence with high correlation to surgery/histology when only considering the item "affected versus unaffected" despite low correlation when we try to precisely grade these lesions.
III: case-control study.
MRI can determine if AP comes from pubis symphysis, musculotendinous or inguinal orifice structures.
Eighteen consecutive patients were enrolled from November 2011 to April 2013 for chronic AP. To constitute a control group, we also enrolled 18 asymptomatic men. All MRI were reviewed in consensus by 2 skeletal radiologists for pubic symphysis, musculotendinous, abdominal wall assessment and compared to surgery and histology findings.
Regarding pubis symphysis, we found 4 symmetric bone marrow oedema (14%), 2 secondary cleft (7%) and 2 superior ligaments lesions (7%). For AL tendon, we mainly found 13 asymmetric bone marrow oedema (46%), 15 hyperaemia (54%). Regarding abdominal wall, the deep inguinal orifice size in the group of symptomatic athletes and the control group was respectively 27.3±6.4mm and 23.8±6.3mm. The correlation between MRI and surgery/histology was low: 20% for the AL tendon and 9% for the abdominal wall. If we chose the criteria "affected versus unaffected", this correlation became higher: 100% for AL tendon and 73% for the abdominal wall.
MRI chronic athletic pubalgia concerns preferentially AL tendinopathy and deep inguinal canal dehiscence with high correlation to surgery/histology when only considering the item "affected versus unaffected" despite low correlation when we try to precisely grade these lesions.
III: case-control study.
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
28/11/2016 13:25
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:21