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Can Supine Magnetic Resonance Imaging Be an Alternative to Standing Lateral Radiographs for Evaluating Cervical Sagittal Alignment?

Authors :
Sang Weon Lee
Sung Hyun Bae
Dong Wuk Son
Su Hun Lee
Geun Sung Song
Jun-Seok Lee
Source :
Korean Journal of Neurotrauma
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Korean Neurotraumatology Society, 2020.

Abstract

Objective Recently, many studies have reported that cervical alignment is related to clinical outcomes. However, poor visibility of anatomical structures during X-ray (XR) imaging limits accurate measurements. In supine magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, the boundary of the anatomical structure is clear, but the correlation to XR images taken in a standing position is problematic. In this study, we evaluated the agreement of sagittal alignment parameters between MR and XR measurements. Methods We retrospectively reviewed 268 patients. Cervical sagittal parameters were measured using XR and MR images, and their relationships were evaluated using Pearson's correlation, paired t-tests, and 2-way random, single score intraclass correlation coefficient (ICCs) (2,1). Using simple linear regression analysis, MR results were converted to the expected value (MR-E). The subsequent comparison of MR-Es with XRs was used to examine whether MR-Es could replace XRs when the measurement difference was less than 2 mm or 2°. Results The correlation between the MR and XR measurements was high, but ICCs showed low reliability. All parameters were significantly different between XR and MR measurements in paired t-tests. Converting the MR values eliminated the t-test differences between MR-Es and XRs, but did not affect correlations and ICCs. The replacement ratio included the Cobb angle: 20.3%, T1: 27.1%, the sagittal vertical axis: 17.6%, C1–2: 29.7%, and C2: 16.0%. Conclusion These results indicate that supine MR measurements could not replace upright XR measurements.

Details

ISSN :
22882243 and 22348999
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Korean Journal of Neurotrauma
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....06564dbce4b0c30bb19fa7a24624d6d7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.13004/kjnt.2020.16.e18