Author:
Sun Shouqi,Chen Chao,Sheng Zhuoqi,Wei Min
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
To analyze the accuracy of MRI in diagnosis of distal tibiofibular syndesmosis instability (DTSI) and construct new diagnostic parameters.
Materials and methods
This retrospective study evaluated 212 patients with history of ankle sprains and 3 T MRI and received a final diagnosis of distal tibiofibular syndesmosis instability by ankle arthroscopic surgery from October 2017 and December 2021. We compared the accuracy of syndesmotic injury, qualitative index of distal tibiofibular joint effusion (DTJE), and quantitative index of distal tibiofibular joint effusion (DTJE) in diagnosing distal tibiofibular syndesmosis instability. The criteria for syndesmotic injury were consistent with previous literature, and DTJE was grouped according to the pre-experimental results.
Results
A total of 212 patients (mean age, 35.64 ± 11.79, 74 female and 138 male) were included. Independent predictive MRI features included syndesmotic injury, qualitative index of distal tibiofibular joint effusion, and quantitative index of DTJE including the height, projected area of equal-point method, and projected area of incremental-value method. The quantitative index of DTJE showed a higher area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (0.805/0.803/0.804/0.811/0.817/0.805 > 0.8, P < 0.05; in comparison with all other method). The height measurement method was simpler and easier to operate, that could be gotten only by measuring the DTJE distance of a MRI independent layer, and the cut-off value of the effusion height was 8.00 mm and the Youden index (0.56) was the best.
Conclusions
Our research translated a complicated string of MRI multi-dimensional spatial measurements into a simple measuring process, and established the significance of quantifying DTJE in the diagnosis of DTSI. We found that the 8-mm height of DTJE was a more specific indicator for DTSI and could serve as a novel MRI diagnostic cutoff in clinical practice.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Cited by
1 articles.
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