8 results on '"Kraan RBJ"'
Search Results
2. The distal radial physis: Exploring normal anatomy on MRI enables interpretation of stress related changes in young gymnasts.
- Author
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Kraan RBJ, Kox LS, Oostra RJ, Kuijer PPFM, and Maas M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Case-Control Studies, Child, Cumulative Trauma Disorders etiology, Female, Growth Plate anatomy & histology, Growth Plate diagnostic imaging, Gymnastics injuries, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Radius anatomy & histology, Radius injuries, Stress, Mechanical, Gymnastics physiology, Radius diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Rationale: Explore the MRI-appearance of the healthy distal radial physis and the distribution of stress-related changes in physeal thickness in young gymnasts to aid in the understanding of the pathophysiological process of stress-related physeal injury. Methods: Symptomatic gymnasts with clinically suspected overuse injury of the distal radial physis and age and gender-matched asymptomatic gymnasts and healthy non-gymnasts underwent an MRI-scan of the wrist. A cartilage-specific sequence was used to obtain three-dimensional reconstructions of the distal radial physis. Heat maps and line charts of these reconstructions visualised distribution of physeal thickness per study group and were used to explore differences between study groups. Symptomatic gymnasts displaying the most profound physeal widening ( n = 10) were analysed separately. Results: Twenty-seven symptomatic - (skeletal age 12.9 ± 1.5 years), 16 asymptomatic - (skeletal age 12.8 ± 1.9 years) and 23 non-gymnasts (skeletal age 13.6 ± 1.9 years) were included for analysis. Physes of healthy non-gymnasts had a thin centre and increased in thickness towards the borders. Gymnasts demonstrated an increase in thickness of the entire physeal surface. In symptomatic gymnasts increase in physeal thickness was most prominent at the volar side when compared to asymptomatic gymnasts and non-gymnasts. Conclusion: The healthy distal radial physis is characterised by a thin centre surrounded by thicker borders. Stress applied to the wrist during gymnastics causes an overall increase in physeal thickness. Profound thickness increase is present at the volar side of the physis mainly in symptomatic gymnasts. These results can help unravel the pathophysiological mechanism of stress-related physeal injury in gymnasts and aid early injury identification.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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3. It's a thin line: development and validation of Dixon MRI-based semi-quantitative assessment of stress-related bone marrow edema in the wrists of young gymnasts and non-gymnasts.
- Author
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Kox LS, Kraan RBJ, Mazzoli V, Mens MA, Kerkhoffs GMJJ, Nederveen AJ, and Maas M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Bone Marrow pathology, Edema diagnosis, Gymnastics, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Wrist Joint pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: To assess reliability and clinical utility of evaluating stress-related metaphyseal water distribution using a semi-quantitative Dixon MRI-based method for early diagnosis of physeal stress injuries in adolescent gymnasts., Methods: Twenty-four gymnasts with clinically suspected overuse injury of the distal radial physis, 18 asymptomatic gymnasts, and 24 non-gymnast controls aged 12 ± 1.5 years prospectively underwent hand radiographs and 3T MRI of the wrist including coronal T1-weighted and T2-weighted Dixon sequences. Two raters measured metaphyseal water signal fraction in 13 radial and ulnar regions of interest (ROI). Inter- and intrarater reliability, interslice (between 3 middle radial slices), and inter-ROI (between 3 ROIs on same level) reliability were assessed using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC). Water signal fractions and their within-person ratios in distal versus most proximal ROIs were compared between groups using one-way analysis of variance., Results: Inter- and intrarater ICCs were 0.79-0.99 and 0.94-1.0 for T1-weighted, and 0.88-1.0 and 0.88-1.0 for T2-weighted Dixon. Interslice and inter-ROI ICCs were 0.55-0.94 and 0.95-0.97 for T1-weighted, and 0.70-0.96 and 0.96-0.97 for T2-weighted Dixon. Metaphyseal water signal fraction in symptomatic gymnasts was higher in six distal ROIs compared with asymptomatic gymnasts and in nine ROIs compared with non-gymnasts (p < 0.05). Metaphyseal water score (ratio of distal versus most proximal ROIs) was 1.61 in symptomatic gymnasts and 1.35 in asymptomatic gymnasts on T2-weighted Dixon (p < 0.05)., Conclusion: Semi-quantitative Dixon MRI-based water signal fraction assessment has good to excellent reproducibility and shows increased metaphyseal water scores in symptomatic gymnasts compared with asymptomatic gymnastic peers., Key Points: • The proposed Dixon MRI-based semi-quantitative method for assessment of metaphyseal bone marrow water content is reliable, with off-the-shelf availability and short scan times. • The metaphyseal water score allows comparisons between gymnasts using a within-person reference area for unaffected metaphyseal bone. • As metaphyseal water score was increased in symptomatic gymnasts compared with asymptomatic gymnasts, this semi-quantitative method can potentially be used as an indicator of bone marrow edema in the early diagnosis of gymnastic physeal stress injury.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Interobserver Reliability in Imaging-Based Fracture Union Assessment-Two Systematic Reviews.
- Author
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Ten Berg PWL, Kraan RBJ, Jens S, and Maas M
- Subjects
- Humans, Observer Variation, Radiography, Reproducibility of Results, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Fractures, Bone diagnostic imaging, Fractures, Bone surgery
- Abstract
Objectives: (A) To investigate the specialty of observers involved in imaging-based assessment of bone fracture union in recent orthopaedic trials and (B) to provide a general overview of observer differences (in terms of interobserver reliability) in radiologic fracture union assessment that have been reported between surgeons and radiologists., Data Sources: Two separate systematic reviews (A, B) of English-, German-, and French-language articles in MEDLINE and Embase databases using the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were done, with the following time frames: (A) January 2016-August 2017 and (B) through November 2017., Study Selection: (A) Clinical trials of surgical fracture treatment evaluating radiologic (non) union. (B) Interobserver studies reporting kappa-values or intraclass correlation coefficients as reliability coefficient for radiologic fracture union assessment. Inclusion criteria for both reviews were fractures of the appendicular skeleton and the use of radiographs or computed tomography., Data Extraction: Data were independently retrieved by 2 reviewers., Data Synthesis: Descriptive statistics and percentages were reported., Results: (A) Forty-eight trials were included, whereof 33 (68%) did not report the observer's specialty. Six trials (13%) reported surgeon observers only, and 6 (13%) reported radiologist observers only. The median number of observers is 1 (interquartile range, 1-2). (B) Thirty-one interobserver studies were included, whereof 11 (35%) included at least 1 surgeon and 1 radiologist. Interobserver reliability varied considerably across the various fracture types studied and outcome scale used and was often unsatisfactory (kappa or intraclass correlation coefficients of <0.7)., Conclusions: In most trials providing observer's characteristics, radiologic fracture union was either rated by 1 surgeon or 1 radiologist. As interobserver reliability can be unsatisfactory, we recommend surgeons and radiologists to further intensify collaboration and trials to include at least 2 observers and associated reliability statistics.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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5. Damage of the distal radial physis in young gymnasts: can three-dimensional assessment of physeal volume on MRI serve as a biomarker?
- Author
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Kraan RBJ, Kox LS, Mens MA, Kuijer PPFM, and Maas M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Biomarkers, Case-Control Studies, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Radius pathology, Reproducibility of Results, Wrist Injuries pathology, Gymnastics injuries, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Radius diagnostic imaging, Radius injuries, Wrist Injuries diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Objective: To explore the use of quantitative volume assessment to identify the presence and extent of stress-related changes of the distal radial physis in gymnasts with suspected physeal injury, asymptomatic gymnasts, and non-gymnasts., Methods: Symptomatic gymnasts with clinically suspected distal radial physeal injury, asymptomatic gymnasts, and non-gymnasts (n = 69) were included and matched on skeletal age and sex. Volume measurements were performed on coronal water selective cartilage MRI images by creating three-dimensional physeal reconstructions semi-automatically using active-contour segmentation based on image-intensity thresholding. Inter- and intra-rater reliability of the measurements were assessed using intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) for absolute agreement., Results: Twenty-seven symptomatic-, 18 asymptomatic-, and 24 non-gymnasts were included with a median age of 13.9 years (interquartile range (IQR) 13.0-15.0 years). Median physeal volume was significantly increased (p < 0.05) in symptomatic- (971 mm
3 , IQR 787-1237 mm3 ) and asymptomatic gymnasts (951 mm3 , IQR 871-1004 mm3 ) compared with non-gymnasts (646 mm3 , IQR 538-795 mm3 ). Inter-rater (ICC 0.96, 95% CI 0.92-0.98) and intra-rater (ICC 0.93, 95% CI 0.85-0.97) reliability of volume measurements were excellent. Of the 10 participants with the highest physeal volumes, nine were symptomatic gymnasts., Conclusion: Increased volume of the distal radial physis can reliably be assessed and is a sign of physeal stress that can be present in both symptomatic- and asymptomatic gymnasts, but gymnasts with suspected physeal injury showed larger volume increases. Future studies should explore if volume assessment can be used to (early) identify athletes with or at risk for physeal stress injuries of the wrist., Key Points: • The volume of the distal radial physis can be reliably assessed by creating three-dimensional physeal reconstructions. • Stress-related volume increase of the distal radial physis is present in symptomatic and asymptomatic gymnasts. • Gymnasts with clinically suspected physeal injury showed larger volume increases compared with asymptomatic gymnasts and may therefore be a valuable addition in the (early) diagnostic workup of physeal stress injuries.- Published
- 2019
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6. Screening for child abuse using a checklist and physical examinations in the emergency department led to the detection of more cases.
- Author
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Teeuw AH, Kraan RBJ, van Rijn RR, Bossuyt PMM, and Heymans HSA
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- Adolescent, Child, Child Abuse statistics & numerical data, Child, Preschool, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Physical Examination, Checklist, Child Abuse diagnosis, Mass Screening
- Abstract
Aim: We studied the accuracy of a screening checklist (SPUTOVAMO), complete physical examination (top-to-toe inspection, TTI) and their combination in detecting child abuse in the emergency department (ED)., Methods: Consecutive patients admitted to the ED of the Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam between January 2011 and 1 July 2013 were included. An Expert Panel assigned a consensus diagnosis to positive cases. For all other and missed cases, the Child Abuse Counselling and Reporting Centre diagnosis was used., Results: We included 17 229 admissions of 12 198 patients. In 46%, SPUTOVAMO was performed, in 33% TTI; 421 children (4.3%) tested positive on either or both, with 68 positive consensus diagnoses. In eight children not reported to the Expert Panel, the Child Abuse Counselling and Reporting Center diagnosis was positive. Ten of 3519 (0.3%) children testing negative on both were child abuse cases; 0.88% of the study group had a final child abuse diagnosis. The estimated PPV was 0.46 for SPUTOVAMO, 0.44 for TTI and 0.43 for the combination., Conclusion: Combining screening tests significantly increased the number of test positives and led to more child abuse cases detected. Combined screening for child abuse in all children less than 18 years old presenting to an ED is recommended., (©2018 Foundation Acta Paediatrica. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Systematic assessment of the growth plates of the wrist in young gymnasts: development and validation of the Amsterdam MRI assessment of the Physis (AMPHYS) protocol.
- Author
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Kox LS, Kraan RBJ, van Dijke KF, Hemke R, Jens S, de Jonge MC, Oei EHG, Smithuis FF, Terra MP, and Maas M
- Abstract
Objectives: To develop and validate a protocol for MRI assessment of the distal radial and ulnar periphyseal area in gymnasts and non-gymnasts., Methods: Twenty-four gymnasts with wrist pain, 18 asymptomatic gymnasts and 24 non-gymnastic controls (33 girls) underwent MRI of the wrist on a 3T scanner. Sequences included coronal proton density-weighted images with and without fat saturation, and three-dimensional water-selective cartilage scan and T2 Dixon series. Skeletal age was determined using hand radiographs. Three experienced musculoskeletal radiologists established a checklist of possible (peri)physeal abnormalities based on literature and clinical experience. Five other musculoskeletal radiologists and residents evaluated 30 MRI scans (10 from each group) using this checklist and reliability was determined using the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) and Fleiss' kappa. A final evaluation protocol was established containing only items with fair to excellent reliability., Results: Twenty-seven items were assessed for reliability. Intra-rater and inter-rater agreement was good to excellent (respective ICCs 0.60-0.91 and 0.60-0.78) for four epiphyseal bone marrow oedema-related items, physeal signal intensity, metaphyseal junction and depth of metaphyseal intrusions. For physeal thickness, thickness compared with proximal physis of first metacarpal, metaphyseal intrusions, physeal connection of intrusions and metaphyseal bone marrow signal intensity, intra-rater agreement was fair to excellent (ICC/kappa 0.55-0.85) and inter-rater agreement was fair (ICC/kappa 0.41-0.59). Twelve items were included in the final protocol., Conclusion: The Amsterdam MRI assessment of the Physis protocol facilitates patient-friendly and reliable assessment of the (peri)physeal area in the radius and ulna., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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8. Serum Lipids and Lipoproteins During Uncomplicated Malaria: A Cohort Study in Lambaréné, Gabon.
- Author
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Visser BJ, de Vries SG, Vingerling R, Gritter M, Kroon D, Aguilar LC, Kraan RBJ, Wieten RW, Danion F, Sjouke B, Adegnika AA, Agnandji ST, Kremsner PG, Hänscheid T, Mens PF, van Vugt M, and Grobusch MP
- Subjects
- Adult, Antigens, Protozoan blood, Apolipoprotein A-I blood, Apolipoproteins B blood, Cholesterol, HDL blood, Cholesterol, LDL blood, Cohort Studies, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Fever blood, Gabon, Humans, Lipid Metabolism, Lipoprotein(a) blood, Malaria, Falciparum blood, Malaria, Falciparum parasitology, Male, Parasitemia blood, Parasitemia parasitology, Plasmodium falciparum growth & development, Protozoan Proteins blood, ROC Curve, Triglycerides blood, Fever diagnosis, Malaria, Falciparum diagnosis, Parasitemia diagnosis
- Abstract
AbstractThe serum lipid profile in malaria patients has been found to differ from that of healthy controls. We investigated serum lipid profile changes in malaria patients over time compared with patients with other febrile diseases. In total, 217 patients were included in the study (111 malaria patients and 106 symptomatic controls, defined as malaria-negative febrile patients). Serum lipid levels (mmol/L) were significantly lower in malaria patients compared with those with other febrile diseases (total cholesterol [TC] = 3.26 [standard deviation = 0.94] versus 3.97 [1.22; P < 0.001]; high-density lipoprotein cholesterol [HDL-C] = 0.43 [0.47] versus 1.05 [0.67; P < 0.001], low-density lipoprotein cholesterol [LDL-C] = 2.05 [0.76] versus 2.42 [0.90; P < 0.001]. Triglycerides (TGs) levels were higher in malaria patients (1.81 [1.02] versus 1.11 [0.82; P < 0.001]). No significant differences were found for apolipoprotein A1, apolipoprotein B, and lipoprotein(a). Cholesterol levels increased toward reference values on day 28 (TC = 3.26-3.98, P < 0.001; HDL-C = 0.43-0.96, P < 0.001; LDL-C = 2.05-2.60, P < 0.001). TG levels decreased from 1.81 on admission to 1.76 (day 3) and 0.88 (day 28; P = 0.130). Lipid profile changes were not correlated with parasitemia or Plasmodium falciparum histidine-rich protein 2 levels. This study confirms characteristic temporary lipid profile changes in malaria. Lipid profile changes demonstrated a good accuracy to discriminate between malaria and other febrile diseases (area under the curve = 0.80 (95% confidence interval = 0.742-0.863, P < 0.001). Several plausible hypotheses exist regarding the pathophysiology of lipid profile changes in malaria. Further studies to elucidate the precise pathways may lead to improved understanding of the underlying pathophysiology.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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