technetium-tc-99m-medronate and Bone-Malalignment

technetium-tc-99m-medronate has been researched along with Bone-Malalignment* in 3 studies

Trials

1 trial(s) available for technetium-tc-99m-medronate and Bone-Malalignment

ArticleYear
Malalignment and subchondral bone turnover in contralateral knees of overweight/obese women with unilateral osteoarthritis: implications for bilateral disease.
    Arthritis care & research, 2011, Volume: 63, Issue:11

    To explore whether the risk of incident tibiofemoral (TF) osteoarthritis (OA) in the radiographically normal contralateral knee of overweight/obese women with unilateral knee OA is mediated by malalignment and/or preceded by increased turnover of subchondral bone.. We used data of post hoc analyses from a randomized controlled trial. Cross-sectional analyses evaluated the baseline association between frontal plane alignment and bone turnover in the medial TF compartment in 78 radiographically normal contralateral knees. Longitudinal analyses ascertained whether incident radiographic OA (TF osteophyte formation within 30 months) was associated with malalignment and/or increased bone turnover at baseline. Alignment subcategories (varus/neutral/valgus) were based on the anatomic axis angle. (99m)Tc-methylene diphosphonate uptake in a late-phase bone scan was quantified in regions of interest in the medial tibia (MT) and medial femur (MF) and adjusted for uptake in a reference segment of the ipsilateral tibial shaft (TS).. MF and MT uptake in varus contralateral knees was 50-55% greater than in the TS. Adjusted MT uptake in varus contralateral knees was significantly greater than that in neutral and valgus contralateral knees (mean 1.55 versus 1.38 and 1.43, respectively; P < 0.05). Among 69 contralateral knees followed longitudinally, 22 (32%) developed TF OA. Varus angulation was associated with a marginally significant increase in the odds of incident OA (adjusted odds ratio 3.98, P = 0.067).. While the small sample size limited our ability to detect statistically significant risk factors, these data suggest that the risk of developing bilateral TF OA in overweight/obese women may be mediated by varus malalignment.

    Topics: Bone Malalignment; Bone Remodeling; Female; Humans; Knee Joint; Logistic Models; Middle Aged; Obesity; Odds Ratio; Osteoarthritis, Knee; Osteophyte; Overweight; Predictive Value of Tests; Radiography; Radionuclide Imaging; Radiopharmaceuticals; Risk Assessment; Risk Factors; Technetium Tc 99m Medronate

2011

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for technetium-tc-99m-medronate and Bone-Malalignment

ArticleYear
Effect of high tibial osteotomy on joint loading in symptomatic patients with varus aligned knees: a study using SPECT/CT.
    Knee surgery, sports traumatology, arthroscopy : official journal of the ESSKA, 2015, Volume: 23, Issue:8

    The purpose was to prospectively evaluate the outcome, in particular the SPECT/CT bone tracer uptake (BTU) after high tibial osteotomy (HTO) due to symptomatic varus malalignment. It was the hypothesis that the BTU after HTO decreases in the medial compartment, clinical outcome and the degree of correction correlates with BTU and asymptomatic patients after HTO reveals a significantly decreased BTU in the medial subchondral areas.. Twenty-two consecutive patients with 23 knees undergoing medial opening-wedge HTO for medial compartment overloading were assessed pre- and postoperatively (12 and/or 24 months) using Tc-99m-HDP-SPECT/CT including our 4D-SPECT/CT protocol. BTU was quantified and localized to specific biomechanically relevant joint areas. Maximum absolute and relative values (mean ± standard deviation, median and range) for each area were recorded. Pre- and postoperative mechanical alignment was measured. At 24 months after HTO, the WOMAC score was used.. A significant decrease of BTU in the medial subchondral zones after HTO was found (preoperatively to 12 and 24 months postoperatively, p < 0.01). BTU normalized in all asymptomatic patients within 24 months. This decrease was partly seen in the lateral compartments, but significantly higher in the medial compartments (p < 0.0001). A significant increase of the BTU was noted in zones directly adjacent to the plate or within the osteotomy zone (p < 0.01). Decreased BTU was observed in osteotomy zones at 24 months postoperatively following higher uptake values at 12 months postoperatively. The average valgus correction of the tibiofemoral angle was 5.9° ± 2.8°. Less stiffness correlated significantly with a higher decrease in BTU (p < 0.05). Higher postoperative BTU significantly correlated with more pain (p < 0.05). No statistical significant associations between BTU and alignment correction were found.. In patients with medial compartment, overloading due to varus malalignment HTO led to a significant decrease in BTU in the medial joint compartments. SPECT/CT BTU patterns and intensity in these patients pre- to 12 and 24 months postoperatively were seen. These correlated significantly with pain and stiffness. Hence, SPECT/CT could be used for assessment of adequate correction and healing after HTO. SPECT/CT could be further used to identify the optimal individualized correction for each patient and clinical scenario.. Diagnostic prospective study, Level II.

    Topics: Bone Malalignment; Female; Humans; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Knee Joint; Male; Middle Aged; Multimodal Imaging; Osteotomy; Prospective Studies; Radiopharmaceuticals; Technetium Tc 99m Medronate; Tibia; Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon; Tomography, X-Ray Computed

2015
Association of bone scintigraphic abnormalities with knee malalignment and pain.
    Annals of the rheumatic diseases, 2009, Volume: 68, Issue:11

    The information content of knee bone scintigraphy was evaluated, including pattern, localisation and intensity of retention relative to radiographic features of knee osteoarthritis, knee alignment and knee symptoms.. A total of 308 knees (159 subjects) with symptomatic and radiographic knee osteoarthritis of at least one knee was assessed by late-phase (99m)Technetium methylene disphosphonate bone scintigraph, fixed-flexion knee radiograph, full limb radiograph for knee alignment and for self-reported knee symptom severity. Generalised linear models were used to control for within-subject correlation of knee data.. The compartmental localisation (medial vs lateral) and intensity of knee bone scan retention were associated with the pattern (varus vs valgus) (p<0.001) and severity (p<0.001) of knee malalignment and localisation and severity of radiographic osteoarthritis (p<0.001). Bone scan agent retention in the tibiofemoral, but not patellofemoral, compartment was associated with severity of knee symptoms (p<0.001) and persisted after adjusting for radiographic osteoarthritis (p<0.001).. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first study describing a relationship between knee malalignment, joint symptom severity and compartment-specific abnormalities by bone scintigraphy. This work demonstrates that bone scintigraphy is a sensitive and quantitative indicator of symptomatic knee osteoarthritis. Used selectively, bone scintigraphy is a dynamic imaging modality that holds great promise as a clinical trial screening tool and outcome measure.

    Topics: Aged; Bone Malalignment; Cohort Studies; Female; Humans; Knee Joint; Male; Middle Aged; Osteoarthritis, Knee; Pain Measurement; Radiography; Radionuclide Imaging; Radiopharmaceuticals; Severity of Illness Index; Technetium Tc 99m Medronate

2009