Tibial stress injury: relationship of radiographic, nuclear medicine bone scanning, MR imaging, and CT Severity grades to clinical severity and time to healing Journal Article uri icon
Overview
abstract
  • PURPOSE: To examine the relationship between severity grade for radiography, triple-phase technetium 99m nuclear medicine bone scanning, magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, and computed tomography (CT); clinical severity; and recovery time from a tibial stress injury (TSI), as well as to evaluate interassessor grading reliability. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This protocol was approved by the Griffith University Human Research Ethics Committee, the Stanford University Panel on Human Subjects in Medical Research, the U.S. Army Human Subjects Research Review Board, and the Australian Defense Human Research Ethics Committee. Informed consent was obtained from all subjects. Forty subjects (17 men, 23 women; mean age, 26.2 years +/- 6.9 [standard deviation]) with TSI were enrolled. Subjects were examined acutely with standard anteroposterior and lateral radiography, nuclear medicine scanning, MR imaging, and CT. Each modality was graded by four blinded clinicians. Mixed-effects models were used to examine associations between image severity, clinical severity, and time to healing, with adjustments for image modality and assessor. Grading reliability was evaluated with the Cronbach alpha coefficient. RESULTS: Image assessment reliability was high for all grading systems except radiography, which was moderate (alpha = 0.565-0.895). Clinical severity was negatively associated with MR imaging severity (P

  • Link to Article
    publication date
  • 2012
  • published in
  • Radiology  Journal
  • Research
    keywords
  • Fractures
  • Injuries
  • Orthopedics
  • Pain
  • Radiography
  • Sports
  • Additional Document Info
    volume
  • 263
  • issue
  • 3