Abstract
Background
Epiphyseal cartilage enhancement defects (ED) may occur in the setting of epiphyseal osteomyelitis (OM), and its significance is uncertain.
Objective
The aim of this study is to evaluate the incidence and clinical impact of epiphyseal cartilage ED in pediatric epiphyseal OM.
Materials and methods
The 13 children involved in this retrospective review were younger than 6 years of age and diagnosed with OM. They underwent contrast-enhanced MRI and surgical exploration yielding 14 study epiphyses. Seventeen age-matched children without evidence of infection who underwent contrast-enhanced MRI in the same period yielded 28 control epiphyses. Images were reviewed for focal/global ED, correlated with cartilage abscesses and compared with surgical reports.
Results
Study and control ED were respectively present in 10/14 (71.4%—6 global, 4 focal) and 6/28 (21.4%—0 global, 6 focal), P = 0.0017. An analysis of ED patterns between study and control patients showed significant difference for global (P = 0.0006), but no difference for focal ED (P = 0.71). For the six study epiphyses with global ED, epiphyseal abscesses were present in two (33.3%). For the four study epiphyses with focal ED, epiphyseal abscesses were present in two (50%). For the controls, no abnormalities were found on follow-up of epiphyses with focal ED.
Conclusion
ED are seen normally but more commonly in children with OM. ED should not be confused with epiphyseal abscesses.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Offiah AC (2006) Acute osteomyelitis, septic arthritis and discitis: differences between neonates and older children. Eur J Radiol 60:221–232
McCarthy JJ, Dormans JP, Kozin SH et al (2005) Musculoskeletal infections in children: basic treatment principles and recent advancements. Instr Course Lect 54:515–528
Perlman MH, Patzakis MJ, Kumar PJ et al (2000) The incidence of joint involvement with adjacent osteomyelitis in pediatric patients. J Pediatr Orthop 20:40–43
Kocher MS, Lee B, Dolan M et al (2006) Pediatric orthopedic infections: early detection and treatment. Pediatr Ann 35:112–122
Saigal G, Azouz EM, Abdenour G (2004) Imaging of osteomyelitis with special reference to children. Semin Musculoskelet Radiol 8:255–265
Menezes NM, Connolly SA, Shapiro F et al (2007) Early ischemia in growing piglet skeleton: MR diffusion and perfusion imaging. Radiology 242:129–136
Tiderius C, Jaramillo D, Connolly S et al (2009) Post-closed reduction perfusion magnetic resonance imaging as a predictor of avascular necrosis in developmental hip dysplasia: a preliminary report. J Pediatr Orthop 29:14–20
Jaramillo D, Villegasmedina OL, Doty DK et al (1995) Gadolinium-enhanced MR-imaging demonstrates abduction-caused hip ischemia and its reversal in piglets. Pediatr Radiol 25:578–587
Hempfing A, Placzek R, Gottsche T et al (2003) Primary subacute epiphyseal and metaepiphyseal osteomyelitis in children. Diagnosis and treatment guided by MRI. J Bone Joint Surg Br 85:559–564
Acknowledgements
Statistics were supported in part by grant UL1 RR024975 from the National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health.
This work was presented at the 2009 Radiological Society North America Meeting, Chicago, IL.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Johnson, D.P., Hernanz-Schulman, M., Martus, J.E. et al. Significance of epiphyseal cartilage enhancement defects in pediatric osteomyelitis identified by MRI with surgical correlation. Pediatr Radiol 41, 355–361 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00247-010-1849-6
Received:
Revised:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00247-010-1849-6