Degenerative Changes of Femoral Articular Cartilage in the Knee: Comparative Study of Specimen Sonography and Pathology.
10.3348/jkrs.2001.44.4.523
- Author:
Ju Youn PARK
1
;
Sung Hwan HONG
;
Jin Hee SOHN
;
Young Hoon WEE
;
Jun Dong CHANG
;
Hong Seok PARK
;
Eil Seoung LEE
;
Ik Won KANG
Author Information
1. Department of Radiology, Hallym University College of Medicine.
- Publication Type:Comparative Study ; Original Article
- Keywords:
Cartilage;
Specimens;
Arthritis, degenerative;
Knee, US
- MeSH:
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee;
Bony Callus;
Cartilage;
Cartilage, Articular*;
Femur;
Humans;
Knee*;
Osteoarthritis;
Pathology*;
Transducers;
Ultrasonography
- From:Journal of the Korean Radiological Society
2001;44(4):523-529
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
PURPOSE: To determine the sonographic findings of degenerative change in femoral articular cartilage of the knee by comparative study of specimen sonography and pathology. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We obtained 40 specimens of cartilage of the femur (20 medial and 20 lateral condylar) from 20 patients with osteoarthritis of the knee who had undergone total knee replacement. The specimens were placed in a saline-filled container and sonography was performed using a 10MHz linear transducer. Sonographic abnormalities were evaluated at the cartilage surface, within the cartilage, and at the bone-cartilage interface, and were compared with the corresponding pathologic findings. In addition, cartilage thickness was measured at a representative portion of each femoral cartilage specimen and was compared with the thickness determined by sonography. RESULTS: 'Dot 'lesions, irregularity or loss of the hyperechoic line, were demonstrated by sonography at the saline-cartilage interface of 14 cartilages. Pathologic examination showed that these findings corresponded to cleft, detachment, erosion, and degeneration. Irregularities in the hyperechoic line at the bone-cartilage interface were revealed by sonography in eight cartilages and were related to irregularity or loss of tidemark, downward displacement of the cartilage, and subchondral callus formation. Dot lesions, corresponding to cleft and degeneration, were noted within one cartilage. Cartilage thickness measured on specimen and by sonography showed no significant difference (p=0.446). CONCLUSION: Specimen sonography suggested that articular cartilage underwent degenerative histopathological change. Cartilage thickness measured by sonography exactly reflected real thickness.