Objective: To analyze possible underlying causes of spontaneous osteonecrosis of the knee in adults in function of the lesion's behavior on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI): acute lesion (insufficiency fractures) or chronic lesion (osteoarthritic degeneration).
Material and methods: We retrospectively evaluated knee MRI studies in 48 patients who fulfilled criteria for spontaneous osteonecrosis. A total of 51 subchondral lesions were included and classified in two groups: those in which linear images were present (Group A) and those in which linear images were not present (Group B). We recorded the location and size of the lesions, their signal intensity, their relation with bone edema, ipsilateral meniscal tear and abnormalities in the adjacent cartilage, as well as the presence of osteoarthritis.
Results: We studied 28 men and 20 women (mean age, 55.1+/-18.0 years). Linear images were present in 58.5% of lesions (group A) and absent in 41.2% (group B). The most common location in both groups was the internal femoral condyle (56.7% in group A and 52.4% in group B), and 88.2% of lesions were hypointense on T1-weighted and fat suppressed proton density sequences. The mean size of the anteroposterior and transversal diameters was 11.9+/-3.6 x 9.4+/-3.9 mm in group A and 10.9+/-5.1 x 10.5+/-4.5 mm in group B. The predominant bone edema was severe (grade 2-3) in group A and mild (grade 0-1) in group B (p=0.033). Defects in the cartilage ipsilateral to the subchondral lesion were more common in group B than in group A, although this difference was not significant (76.2% and 56.7%, respectively; p=0.33). The frequency of ipsilateral meniscal tear was similar in the two groups (56.7% in group A and 57.1% in group B; p=0.97).
Conclusion: Knowing the MRI findings for spontaneous osteonecrosis and evaluating other data (type of lesion, bone edema, meniscal tear, and ipsilateral cartilage defects) can help determine the primary predisposing process. Linear lesions might be related to an acute process (insufficiency fractures) and non-linear lesions might be related to a chronic process (osteoarthritis).
Copyright © 2008 SERAM. Published by Elsevier Espana. All rights reserved.