Evaluation of the diagnostic value of SPECT/CT in patients with knee and/or hip OA, whether it is related to clinical findings and it could reflect clinical disease activity, and to determine the usefulness of SPECT/CT in early detection of OA.
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a slowly developing chronic degenerative joint disease that progresses over years. After the classification and reporting of OA were established by American College of Rheumatology in 1986, the diagnosis has depended on the patients' symptoms and supported by plain radiographic findings. Since X-ray image has a discrepancy with clinical findings, the therapeutic modalities tend to depend on the clinical symptoms, rather than the objective imaging findings. MRI is a non-invasive and a very sensitive tool in detecting the early bony change such as bone marrow oedema, but it has some limitation in that it may have false positive or false negative results in the detection of the patella-femoral (PF) lesions. Bone scintigraphy is relatively sensitive because it reflects the early physiological changes of joints. But its image is planar that it cannot give enough information for the anatomic localization, and the image is overlapped. To compensate for the defects of these imaging methods, bone single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) has emerged as useful imaging tools in the diagnosis of OA. Based upon the fact that subchondral bony changes precede joint space narrowing in OA, bone SPECT seems to be a very useful tool in early OA, reflecting the early bony changes. The use of SPECT/CT offers the benefit of combined anatomical, mechanical (CT) and functional imaging (SPECT), which represents a relevant improvement in preoperative diagnosis and follow-up after procedures.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
40
Combined single photon emission computerized tomography and conventional computerized tomography (SPECT/CT) is a hybrid imaging modality, which combines a 3D bone scintigraphy (SPECT) and a conventional CT into one imaging procedure. The use of SPECT/CT offers the benefit of combined anatomical, mechanical (CT) and functional imaging (SPECT)
Detecting different pattern of osseous MDP uptake in patient with osteoarthritis in hip joints and/or knees in relation to clinical and simple radiographic findings.
Osteoarthritic patients will be examined with 99mTc-methylene diphosphonate (MDP) bone SPECT, the sites of uptake will be localized. Simple radiograph and physical examination will be assessed.The relationships between clinical findings, simple radiographic findings and the intensity of uptake in SPECT will be analyzed.
Time frame: Baseline
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