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MRI-guided sacroiliac joint injections in children and adults: current practice and future developments

Dalili, Danoob; Isaac, Amanda; Fritz, Jan
Common etiologies of low back pain include degenerative arthrosis and inflammatory arthropathy of the sacroiliac joints. The diagnostic workup revolves around identifying and confirming the sacroiliac joints as a pain generator. Diagnostic sacroiliac joint injections often serve as functional additions to the diagnostic workup through eliciting a pain response that tests the hypothesis that the sacroiliac joints do or do not contribute to the patient's pain syndrome. Therapeutic sacroiliac joint injections aim to provide medium- to long-term relief of symptoms and reduce inflammatory activity and, ultimately, irreversible structural damage. Ultrasonography, fluoroscopy, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may be used to guide sacroiliac joint injections. The populations that may benefit most from MRI-guided sacroiliac joint procedures include children, adolescents, adults of childbearing age, and patients receiving serial injections due to the ability of interventional MRI to avoid radiation exposure. Most clinical wide-bore MRI systems can be used for MRI-guided sacroiliac joint injections. Turbo spin echo pulse sequences optimized for interventional needle display visualize the needle tip with an error margin of < 1 mm or less. Published success rates of intra-articular sacroiliac joint drug delivery with MRI guidance range between 87 and 100%. The time required for MR-guided sacroiliac joint injections in adults range between 23-35 min and 40 min in children. In this article, we describe techniques for MRI-guided sacroiliac joint injections, share our practice of incorporating interventional MRI in the care of patients with sacroiliac joint mediated pain, discuss the rationales, benefits, and limitations of interventional MRI, and conclude with future developments.
PMID: 36006462
ISSN: 1432-2161
CID: 5331712

[Imaging of hearing loss]

Fritz, Jan; Gohla, Georg; Horger, Marius; Baumgartner, Karolin; Heckl, Stefan
PMID: 36446579
ISSN: 1438-9010
CID: 5373962

[Imaging of hearing loss]

Horger, Marius; Fritz, Jan; Gohla, Georg; Baumgartner, Karolin; Heckl, Stefan
PMID: 36577436
ISSN: 1438-9010
CID: 5418952

Acute and Chronic Elbow Disorders: MR Imaging-Ultrasonography Correlation

Daniels, Steven P; Fritz, Jan
Elbow pain is very common and can be due to many pathologic conditions. After radiographs are obtained, advanced imaging is often necessary. Both ultrasonography and MR imaging can be used to evaluate the many important soft-tissue structures of the elbow, with each modality having advantages and disadvantages in certain clinical scenarios. Imaging findings between the two modalities often correlate. It is important for musculoskeletal radiologists to understand normal elbow anatomy and how best to use ultrasonography and MR imaging to evaluate elbow pain. In this way, radiologists can provide expert guidance to referring clinicians and best guide patient management.
PMID: 37019550
ISSN: 1557-9786
CID: 5467032

Musculoskeletal Soft-tissue Masses: MR imaging-Ultrasonography Correlation, with an Emphasis on the 2020 World Health Organization Classification

Burke, Christopher J; Fritz, Jan; Samim, Mohammad
Evaluation of soft-tissue masses has become a common clinical practice indication for imaging with both ultrasound and MR imaging. We illustrate the ultrasonography and MR imaging appearances of soft-tissue masses based on the various categories, updates, and reclassifications of the 2020 World Health Organization classification.
PMID: 37019551
ISSN: 1557-9786
CID: 5467042

MR Imaging-Ultrasonography Correlation of Acute and Chronic Foot and Ankle Conditions

Fritz, Benjamin; Fritz, Jan
Foot and ankle injuries are common musculoskeletal disorders. In the acute setting, ligamentous injuries are most common, whereas fractures, osseous avulsion injuries, tendon and retinaculum tears, and osteochondral injuries are less common. The most common chronic and overuse injuries include osteochondral and articular cartilage defects, tendinopathies, stress fractures, impingement syndromes, and neuropathies. Common forefoot conditions include traumatic and stress fractures, metatarsophalangeal and plantar plate injuries and degenerations, intermittent bursitis, and perineural fibrosis. Ultrasonography is well-suited for evaluating superficial tendons, ligaments, and muscles. MR imaging is best for deeper-located soft tissue structures, articular cartilage, and cancellous bone.
PMID: 37019553
ISSN: 1557-9786
CID: 5467052

Musculoskeletal Ultrasonography-MR Imaging Correlation: A Key Component for Best Practice [Editorial]

Fritz, Jan
PMID: 37019555
ISSN: 1557-9786
CID: 5467062

MR Imaging of Acute Knee Injuries: Systematic Evaluation and Reporting

Fritz, Benjamin; Fritz, Jan
Acute knee injury ranges among the most common joint injuries in professional and recreational athletes. Radiographs can detect joint effusion, fractures, deformities, and malalignment; however, MR imaging is most accurate for radiographically occult fractures, chondral injury, and soft tissue injuries. Using a structured checklist approach for systematic MR imaging evaluation and reporting, this article reviews the MR imaging appearances of the spectrum of traumatic knee injuries, including osteochondral injuries, cruciate ligament tears, meniscus tears and ramp lesions, anterolateral complex and collateral ligament injuries, patellofemoral translation, extensor mechanism tears, and nerve and vascular injuries.
PMID: 36739145
ISSN: 1557-8275
CID: 5426832

Treatment of Osteoid Osteoma

Dalili, Danoob; Dalili, Daniel E; Isaac, Amanda; Martel-Villagrán, José; Fritz, Jan
PMCID:10159722
PMID: 37152792
ISSN: 0739-9529
CID: 5544472

Modern Low-Field MRI of the Musculoskeletal System: Practice Considerations, Opportunities, and Challenges

Khodarahmi, Iman; Keerthivasan, Mahesh B; Brinkmann, Inge M; Grodzki, David; Fritz, Jan
ABSTRACT/UNASSIGNED:Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides essential information for diagnosing and treating musculoskeletal disorders. Although most musculoskeletal MRI examinations are performed at 1.5 and 3.0 T, modern low-field MRI systems offer new opportunities for affordable MRI worldwide. In 2021, a 0.55 T modern low-field, whole-body MRI system with an 80-cm-wide bore was introduced for clinical use in the United States and Europe. Compared with current higher-field-strength MRI systems, the 0.55 T MRI system has a lower total ownership cost, including purchase price, installation, and maintenance. Although signal-to-noise ratios scale with field strength, modern signal transmission and receiver chains improve signal yield compared with older low-field magnetic resonance scanner generations. Advanced radiofrequency coils permit short echo spacing and overall compacter echo trains than previously possible. Deep learning-based advanced image reconstruction algorithms provide substantial improvements in perceived signal-to-noise ratios, contrast, and spatial resolution. Musculoskeletal tissue contrast evolutions behave differently at 0.55 T, which requires careful consideration when designing pulse sequences. Similar to other field strengths, parallel imaging and simultaneous multislice acquisition techniques are vital for efficient musculoskeletal MRI acquisitions. Pliable receiver coils with a more cost-effective design offer a path to more affordable surface coils and improve image quality. Whereas fat suppression is inherently more challenging at lower field strengths, chemical shift selective fat suppression is reliable and homogeneous with modern low-field MRI technology. Dixon-based gradient echo pulse sequences provide efficient and reliable multicontrast options, including postcontrast MRI. Metal artifact reduction MRI benefits substantially from the lower field strength, including slice encoding for metal artifact correction for effective metal artifact reduction of high-susceptibility metallic implants. Wide-bore scanner designs offer exciting opportunities for interventional MRI. This review provides an overview of the economical aspects, signal and image quality considerations, technological components and coils, musculoskeletal tissue relaxation times, and image contrast of modern low-field MRI and discusses the mainstream and new applications, challenges, and opportunities of musculoskeletal MRI.
PMID: 36165841
ISSN: 1536-0210
CID: 5334182