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This study aimed to obtain high-resolution 3D isotropic turbo spin-echo (TSE) wrist MRI acquisitions at 7T, with and without fat suppression, facilitated by compressed-sensing (CS) acceleration. In 16 healthy subjects, fat-suppressed (FS) and nonfat-suppressed (NFS) TSE wrist images were obtained. The protocol consisted of a SENSE-accelerated scan, with an isotropic voxel size of 0.45 mm and acquisition time of 7 min ("SENSE45"), a 0.45-mm, 4-min CS-accelerated scan ("CS45"), and a 0.35-mm, 7-min CS-accelerated scan ("CS35"). For two subjects, additional 0.45-mm, 4-min SENSE-accelerated scans were acquired ("High-SENSE"). For the NFS scans, refocusing pulses were optimized to mitigate water-fat chemical-shift artifacts in the slab-selection direction. Anatomical visibility of wrist structures and image quality were assessed qualitatively and through musculoskeletal radiologist grading. The use of nonselective hard refocusing pulses with optimized bandwidths and a center frequency in between water and fat enabled NFS imaging. The image quality of the faster CS45 scans was lower than for SENSE45, with statistically significantly different grading in 9/16 (FS) and 2/6 (NFS) grading parameters. Nonetheless, a similar scan time reduction could not be achieved using High-SENSE. No distinct benefit of CS35 compared to SENSE45 was evident in either the FS or NFS scans. NFS CS35 exhibited enhanced bone sharpness compared to SENSE45 for some subjects, yet on a group level, the difference was not statistically significant. In conclusion, for maintained voxel size, CS presents the opportunity to achieve shorter scan times than possible with SENSE alone, but with reduced image quality. For maintained scan time, although higher resolution CS incidentally showed a promising increase in NFS bone sharpness compared to SENSE, it does not present an unequivocal advantage for 3D 7-T TSE wrist MRI at this stage. Further optimization of the acquisition and reconstruction process is recommended.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/nbm.70041 | DOI Listing |
Acta Ortop Mex
September 2025
Universidad de Manizales. Colombia.
Articular tuberculosis is a rare condition, with extrapulmonary presentations most commonly appearing in joints such as the hip or knee. It is usually associated with conditions like immunosuppression or a history of pulmonary tuberculosis. Diagnosis involves imaging or pathology, and treatment typically involves surgical intervention along with medication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHand (N Y)
September 2025
Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, USA.
Background: Although trauma is a major cause of symptomatic scapholunate interosseous ligament (SLIL) pathology, many patients do not recall a specific injury or repetitive trauma. We report on: (1) the prevalence of SLIL signal changes in patients who underwent wrist magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for various indications; and (2) the prevalence of SLIL signal changes on MRI in patients without prior wrist trauma.
Methods: This is a retrospective study evaluating 1021 patients who underwent wrist MRI or magnetic resonance arthrogram.
A 52-year-old Myanmar man presented with bilateral progressive painless asymmetrical wrist and finger drop in 1 year without any sensory and sphincter problems. He has hypochromic microcytic anemia diagnosed as Hemoglobin E disease before. However, a serial full blood count revealed thrombocytopenia and a drop in hemoglobin disproportionate to HbE disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrthop Traumatol Surg Res
September 2025
Ankara University Medical Faculty, Orthopedics and Traumatology Department, Hand and Upper Extremity Surgery Division, Ankara, Turkey.
Background: Kienböck's disease poses challenges in plate placement during radial shortening osteotomy due to steep metaphyseal inclinations of the distal radius. While coronal plane analyses have been extensively studied, sagittal plane deformities remain underexplored. This study addresses the anatomical variations in the sagittal plane associated with Kienböck's disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeveloping musculoskeletal hand models requires a variety of experimental biomechanics data. However, collecting robust biomechanics hand data is a time intensive process leading to a lack of widely available datasets. To address this issue the biomechanics hand modeling database (BHaM) was made as a collection of experimental data to aid the development, testing, and validation of musculoskeletal models and simulations.
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