Forschung & Innovation
Publikationen
Anterior cruciate ligament injury and age affect knee cartilage T2 but not thickness
PMU Autor*innen
Wolfgang Wirth, Felix Eckstein
Alle Autor*innen
Simon Herger, Wolfgang Wirth, Felix Eckstein, Corina Nüesch, Christian Egloff, Annegret Mündermann
Fachzeitschrift
OSTEOARTHRITIS AND CARTILAGE
Kurzfassung
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effect of unilateral anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury on cartilage thickness and composition, specifically laminar transverse relaxation time (T2) by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), in younger and older participants and to compare within-person side differences in these parameters between ACL-injured and healthy controls.
DESIGN: Quantitative double-echo steady-state 3 Tesla MRI-sequences were acquired in both knees of 85 participants in four groups: 20-30 years: healthy, HEA 20-30, n = 24; ACL-injured, ACL 20-30, n = 23; 40-60 years: healthy, HEA 40-60, n = 24; ACL-injured, ACL 40-60, n = 14 (ACL injury 2-10 years prior to study inclusion). Weight-bearing femorotibial cartilages were manually segmented; cartilage T2 and thickness were computed using custom software. Mean and side differences in subregional cartilage thickness, superficial and deep cartilage T2 were compared within and between groups using non-parametric statistics.
RESULTS: Cartilage thickness did not differ within or between groups. Only the side difference in medial femorotibial cartilage thickness was greater in ACL 20-30 than in HEA 20-30. Deep zone T2 was longer in the ACL-injured than in the contralateral uninjured knees and than in healthy controls, especially in the lateral compartment. Most ACL-injured participants had side differences in femorotibial deep zone T2 above the threshold derived from controls.
CONCLUSION: In the ACL-injured knee, early compositional differences in femorotibial cartilage (T2) appear to occur in the deep zone and precede cartilage thickness loss. These results suggest that monitoring laminar T2 after ACL injury may be useful in diagnosing and monitoring early articular cartilage changes.