Comprehensive evaluation of magnetic resonance imaging sequences for signal intensity based assessment of anterior cruciate ligament healing following surgical treatment

Author:

Kaushal Shankar G.1ORCID,Kim Jin‐Young1,Singh Mallika1ORCID,Han Mo1,Flannery Sean W.2ORCID,Barnes Dominique A.2ORCID,Ecklund Kirsten3,Murray Martha M.1ORCID,Badger Gary J.4,Fleming Braden C.2ORCID,Kiapour Ata M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Orthopedics, Rhode Island Hospital Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

3. Department of Radiology, Boston Children's Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Medical Biostatistics, Larner College of Medicine University of Vermont Burlington Vermont USA

Abstract

AbstractNormalized signal intensity (SI) obtained from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been used to track anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) postoperative remodeling. We aimed to assess the effect of MRI sequence (PD: proton density‐weighted; T2: T2‐weighted; CISS: constructive interference in steady state) on postoperative changes in healing ACLs/grafts. We hypothesized that CISS is better at detecting longitudinal SI and texture changes of the healing ACL/graft compared to the common clinical sequences (PD and T2). MR images of patients who underwent ACL surgery were evaluated and separated into groups based on surgical procedure (Bridge‐Enhanced ACL Repair (BEAR; n = 50) versus ACL reconstruction (ACLR; n = 24)). CISS images showed decreasing SI across all timepoints in both the BEAR and ACLR groups (p < 0.01), PD and T2 images showed decreasing SI in the 6‐to‐12‐ and 12‐to‐24‐month postoperative timeframes in the BEAR group (p < 0.02), and PD images additionally showed decreasing SI between 6‐ and 24‐months postoperation in the ACLR group (p = 0.02). CISS images showed texture changes in both the BEAR and ACLR groups, showing increases in energy and decreases in entropy in the 6‐to‐12‐ and 6‐to‐24‐month postoperative timeframes in the BEAR group (p  0.04), and increases in energy, decreases in entropy, and increases in homogeneity between 6 and 24 months postoperation in the ACLR group (p < 0.04). PD images showed increases in energy and decreases in entropy between 6‐ and 24‐months postoperation in the ACLR group (p < 0.008). Finally, CISS was estimated to require a smaller sample size than PD and T2 to detect SI differences related to postoperative remodeling.

Funder

National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases

Publisher

Wiley

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