Header

UZH-Logo

Maintenance Infos

Feasibility and preliminary results of SPECT/CT arthrography of the wrist in comparison with MR arthrography in patients with suspected ulnocarpal impaction


Strobel, Klaus; Steurer-Dober, Isabelle; Da Silva, Angela J; Huellner, Martin W; del Sol Pérez Lago, Maria; Bodmer, Elvira; von Wartburg, Urs; Veit-Haibach, Patrick; Tornquist, Katharina; Hug, Urs (2014). Feasibility and preliminary results of SPECT/CT arthrography of the wrist in comparison with MR arthrography in patients with suspected ulnocarpal impaction. European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, 41(3):548-555.

Abstract

PURPOSE To evaluate the feasibility and performance of SPECT/CT arthrography of the wrist in comparison with MR arthrography in patients with suspected ulnocarpal impaction. METHODS This prospective study included 28 wrists of 27 patients evaluated with SPECT/CT arthrography and MR arthrography. Iodine contrast medium and gadolinium were injected into the distal radioulnar and midcarpal joints. Late-phase SPECT/CT was performed 3.5 h after intravenous injection of approximately 650 MBq (99m)Tc-DPD. MR and SPECT/CT images were separately reviewed in relation to bone marrow oedema, radionuclide uptake, and tears in the scapholunate (SL) and lunotriquetral (LT) ligaments and triangular fibrocartilage complex (TFCC), and an overall diagnosis of ulnar impaction. MR, CT and SPECT/CT imaging findings were compared with each other, with the surgical findings in 12 patients and with clinical follow-up. RESULTS The quality of MR arthrography and SPECT/CT arthrography images was fully diagnostic in 23 of 28 wrists (82%) and 25 of 28 wrists (89%), respectively. SPECT/CT arthrography was not diagnostic for ligament lesions due to insufficient intraarticular contrast in one wrist. MR and SPECT/CT images showed concordant findings regarding TFCC lesions in 22 of 27 wrists (81%), SL ligament in 22 of 27 wrists (81%) and LT ligament in 23 of 27 wrists (85%). Bone marrow oedema on MR images and scintigraphic uptake were concordant in 21 of 28 wrists (75%). MR images showed partial TFCC defects in four patients with normal SPECT/CT images. MR images showed bone marrow oedema in 4 of 28 wrists (14%) without scintigraphic uptake, and scintigraphic uptake was present without MR bone marrow oedema in three wrists (11%). Regarding diagnosis of ulnar impaction the concordance rate between CT and SPECT/CT was 100% and reached 96% (27 of 28) between MR and SPECT/CT arthrography. The sensitivity and specificity of MR, CT and SPECT/CT arthrography were 93%, 100% and 100%, and 93%, 93% and 93%, respectively. CONCLUSION SPECT/CT arthrography of the wrist is feasible. Regarding diagnosis of ulnar impaction we found a high concordance with MR arthrography. SPECT/CT arthrography of the wrist is an alternative to MR arthrography in patients with contraindications to MR imaging.

Abstract

PURPOSE To evaluate the feasibility and performance of SPECT/CT arthrography of the wrist in comparison with MR arthrography in patients with suspected ulnocarpal impaction. METHODS This prospective study included 28 wrists of 27 patients evaluated with SPECT/CT arthrography and MR arthrography. Iodine contrast medium and gadolinium were injected into the distal radioulnar and midcarpal joints. Late-phase SPECT/CT was performed 3.5 h after intravenous injection of approximately 650 MBq (99m)Tc-DPD. MR and SPECT/CT images were separately reviewed in relation to bone marrow oedema, radionuclide uptake, and tears in the scapholunate (SL) and lunotriquetral (LT) ligaments and triangular fibrocartilage complex (TFCC), and an overall diagnosis of ulnar impaction. MR, CT and SPECT/CT imaging findings were compared with each other, with the surgical findings in 12 patients and with clinical follow-up. RESULTS The quality of MR arthrography and SPECT/CT arthrography images was fully diagnostic in 23 of 28 wrists (82%) and 25 of 28 wrists (89%), respectively. SPECT/CT arthrography was not diagnostic for ligament lesions due to insufficient intraarticular contrast in one wrist. MR and SPECT/CT images showed concordant findings regarding TFCC lesions in 22 of 27 wrists (81%), SL ligament in 22 of 27 wrists (81%) and LT ligament in 23 of 27 wrists (85%). Bone marrow oedema on MR images and scintigraphic uptake were concordant in 21 of 28 wrists (75%). MR images showed partial TFCC defects in four patients with normal SPECT/CT images. MR images showed bone marrow oedema in 4 of 28 wrists (14%) without scintigraphic uptake, and scintigraphic uptake was present without MR bone marrow oedema in three wrists (11%). Regarding diagnosis of ulnar impaction the concordance rate between CT and SPECT/CT was 100% and reached 96% (27 of 28) between MR and SPECT/CT arthrography. The sensitivity and specificity of MR, CT and SPECT/CT arthrography were 93%, 100% and 100%, and 93%, 93% and 93%, respectively. CONCLUSION SPECT/CT arthrography of the wrist is feasible. Regarding diagnosis of ulnar impaction we found a high concordance with MR arthrography. SPECT/CT arthrography of the wrist is an alternative to MR arthrography in patients with contraindications to MR imaging.

Statistics

Citations

Dimensions.ai Metrics
12 citations in Web of Science®
12 citations in Scopus®
Google Scholar™

Altmetrics

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Clinic for Nuclear Medicine
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Health Sciences > Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging
Language:English
Date:March 2014
Deposited On:27 Aug 2014 17:11
Last Modified:24 Jan 2022 04:38
Publisher:Springer
ISSN:1619-7070
OA Status:Closed
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259-013-2584-7
PubMed ID:24177809
Full text not available from this repository.