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Systematic assessment of inflammation by magnetic resonance imaging in the posterior elements of the spine in ankylosing spondylitis

✍ Scribed by Walter P. Maksymowych; Sean M. Crowther; Suhkvinder S. Dhillon; Barbara Conner-Spady; Robert G. W. Lambert


Publisher
Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
204 KB
Volume
62
Category
Article
ISSN
2151-464X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Objective

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is sensitive for scoring inflammatory lesions in the spine, but attention has primarily focused on vertebral bodies, and no study has systematically examined the posterior elements. We aimed to systematically determine the frequency and distribution of inflammatory changes in the posterior elements of the spine using MRI, and to assess the reliability of their detection and their impact on discrimination of spinal MRI.

Methods

We scanned 32 patients recruited to placebo‐controlled trials of anti–tumor necrosis factor therapy. Inflammatory lesions were detected by systematic review of consecutive sagittal STIR slices of the entire spine. Two readers evaluated pretreatment and posttreatment scans, blinded to treatment and time point. Inflammation was scored dichotomously (present/absent) in each posterior structure. Reproducibility was assessed by calculating random model variance components and generalizability coefficients, and discrimination by using Guyatt's effect size.

Results

Most patients (87.5%) had β‰₯1 lesion in the posterior elements (mean Β± SD number of affected spinal levels per patient 6.7 Β± 5.3), and they were detected most frequently in the thoracic spine. Interobserver reproducibility for total lesion count was very good to excellent for lesions in the thoracic spine and transverse and spinous processes. The addition of a simple dichotomous method for scoring posterior element inflammation substantially enhanced the discrimination observed using established MRI methods for scoring vertebral body inflammation.

Conclusion

Inflammatory lesions in the posterior elements were present in the majority of patients with AS, and standard MRI protocols of the spine should be modified to ensure adequate visualization of posterolateral structures.


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Inflammatory lesions of the spine on mag
✍ Walter P. Maksymowych; Praveena Chiowchanwisawakit; Tracey Clare; Susanne J. Ped πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 2009 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English βš– 242 KB πŸ‘ 2 views

## Abstract ## Objective To determine whether a vertebral corner that demonstrates an active corner inflammatory lesion (CIL) on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is more likely to evolve into a de novo syndesmophyte visible on plain radiography than is