We developed and evaluated scales for grading the prevalence and progression of the individual radiographic features of osteoarthritis (OA) of the hand. Four equally time-spaced hand radiographs from 50 participants in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, who were followed for at least 20 year
Quantitative microfocal radiographic assessment of progression in osteoarthritis of the hand
โ Scribed by J. C. Buckland-Wright; D. G. Macfarlane; J. A. Lynch; B. Clark
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 774 KB
- Volume
- 33
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0004-3591
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โฆ Synopsis
We studied 32 patients with osteoarthritis who had 5x macroradiographs taken of their wrists and hands at 6-month intervals over an 18-month period. The higher magnification and resolution of microfocal radiography permitted the quantitative detection of progressive changes in 4 different features: subchondral sclerosis, the number and size of osteophytes, juxtaarticular radiolucencies, and joint space narrowing. Compared with normal control subjects, subchondral cortical thickness was greater in all patients at entry and showed a variable degree of change over the study period. Osteophytes and juxtaarticular radiolucencies were present in all patients at study entry; by the end of the study, osteophytes had increased in number and area, and juxtaarticular radiolucencies had increased in area, but not in number. At entry, 44% of the patients had joint space narrowing significantly greater than that in the control subjects; by 18 months, this proportion increased to 65%. No correlation was found between subchondral sclerosis, osteaphytes, juxtaarticular radiolucencies, and joint space narrowing. We conclude that in osteoarthritis of the hand, the bony changes have
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## Abstract ## Objective To investigate whether radiographic osteoarthritis (OA) is asymmetric and greater on the right side than on the left side in the hands, hips, and knees. ## Methods Participants were 489 individuals with posteroanterior hand radiographs from a family study of nodal OA, 1,