1. The relationship of three‐dimensional joint space width on weight‐bearing CT with pain and physical function
- Author
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Kothari, Mayank D, Rabe, Kaitlin G, Anderson, Donald D, Nevitt, Michael C, Lynch, John A, Franz, Hayden, and Segal, Neil A
- Subjects
Engineering ,Health Sciences ,Sports Science and Exercise ,Biomedical Engineering ,Pain Research ,Osteoarthritis ,Arthritis ,Chronic Pain ,Musculoskeletal ,arthralgia ,imaging ,knee joint ,physical function ,three-dimensional ,Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study Group ,Arthralgia ,Imaging ,Physical Function ,Three-dimensional ,Knee Joint ,Clinical Sciences ,Human Movement and Sports Sciences ,Orthopedics ,Biomedical engineering ,Sports science and exercise - Abstract
Limitations of plain radiographs may contribute to poor sensitivity in the detection of knee osteoarthritis and poor correlation with pain and physical function. 3D joint space width, measured from weight bearing CT images, may yield a more accurate correlation with patients' symptoms. We assessed the cross-sectional association between 3D joint space width and self-reported pain and physical function. 528 knees (57% women) were analyzed from Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study participants. An upright weight bearing CT scanner was used to acquire bilateral, weight-bearing fixed-flexion images of the knees. A 3D dataset was reconstructed from cone beam projections and joint space width was calculated across the joint surface. The percentages of the apposed medial tibiofemoral joint surface with joint space width
- Published
- 2020