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The American Journal of Sports Medicine 17:620-623 (1989)
© 1989 SAGE Publications

Occult intraosseous fracture: Magnetic resonance appearance versus age of injury

Joong K. Lee, MD

Departments of Diagnostic Radiology, Albany Medical College

Lawrence Yao, MD

Albany Medical Center Hospital, Albany, New York

Twenty-two cases of occult intraosseous fracture in the region of the knee are presented. Occult intraos seous fractures have been incidentally detected in the magnetic resonance (MR) evaluation of the knee in the setting of a recent physical injury and normal radio graphic studies. There is no unique mechanism of in jury, but occult intraosseous fracture presumably re sults from direct impaction or axial overloading. MR shows speckled or band-like areas of low signal in the intramedullary space of the epiphyses, and occasion ally, the adjacent metaphyses. In most cases, T2- weighted images show high signal in corresponding regions of variable size. The relative extent of high signal findings is shown to vary significantly with the age of injury. Individual variability within groups, how ever, precludes the actual prediction of lesion age on the basis of the MR appearance. Our observations provide indirect evidence that the findings on T2- weighted images resolve earlier than the corresponding findings on T1-weighted or proton density images. The primary differential diagnosis in cases of occult intraos seous fracture is stress fracture. The diagnosis of oc cult intraosseous fracture may be important in explain ing persistent pain after injury in otherwise normal knees.




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Copyright © 1989 by the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine.