4.3 Article

Chondral Injury Associated With ACL Injury: Assessing Progressive Chondral Degeneration With Morphologic and Quantitative MRI Techniques

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SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/19417381231205276

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anterior cruciate ligament injury; post-traumatic chondral injury; post-traumatic osteoarthritis; quantitative and qualitative magnetic resonance imaging

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After ACL injury, early and progressive chondral damage primarily affects the lateral tibiofemoral compartment, but chondral degeneration also occurs in other compartments of the injured and contralateral knee.
Background: Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries are associated with a risk of post-traumatic osteoarthritis due to chondral damage. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques provide excellent visualization and assessment of cartilage and can detect subtle and early chondral damage. This is often preceding clinical and radiographic post-traumatic osteoarthritis.Hypothesis: Morphologic and quantitative MRI techniques can assess early and progressive degenerative chondral changes after acute ACL injury.Study Design: Prospective longitudinal cohort.Level of Evidence: Level 3.Methods: Sixty-five participants with acute unilateral ACL injuries underwent bilateral knee MRI scans within 1 month of injury. Fifty-seven participants presented at 6 months, while 54 were evaluated at 12 months. MRI morphologic evaluation using a modified Noyes score assessed cartilage signal alteration, chondral damage, and subchondral bone status. Quantitative T1 rho and T2 mapping at standardized anatomic locations in both knees was assessed. Participant-reported outcomes at follow-up time points were recorded.Results: Baseline Noyes scores of MRI detectable cartilage damage were highest in the injured knee lateral tibial plateau (mean 2.5, standard error (SE) 0.20, P < 0.01), followed by lateral femoral condyle (mean 2.1, SE 0.18, P < 0.01), which progressed after 1 year. Longitudinal prolongation at 12 months in the injured knees was significant for T1 rho affecting the medial and lateral femoral condyles (P < 0.01) and trochlea (P < 0.01), whereas T2 values were prolonged for medial and lateral femoral condyles (P < 0.01) and trochlea (P < 0.01). The contralateral noninjured knees also demonstrated T1 rho and T2 prolongation in the medial and lateral compartment chondral subdivisions. Progressive chondral damage occurred despite improved patient-reported outcomes.Conclusion: After ACL injury, initial and sustained chondral damage predominantly affects the lateral tibiofemoral compartment, but longitudinal chondral degeneration also occurred in other compartments of the injured and contralateral knee.Clinical Relevance: Early identification of chondral degeneration post-ACL injury using morphological and quantitative MRI techniques could enable interventions to be implemented early to prevent or delay PTOA.

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