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The association of meniscal damage with joint effusion in persons without radiographic osteoarthritis: the Framington and MOST osteoarthritis studies

The association of meniscal damage with joint effusion in persons without radiographic osteoarthritis: the Framington and MOST osteoarthritis studies
The association of meniscal damage with joint effusion in persons without radiographic osteoarthritis: the Framington and MOST osteoarthritis studies
Objective: to assess the cross-sectional association between meniscal status and joint effusion on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in knees without radiographic osteoarthritis (OA).

Design: knees without OA (Kellgren/Lawrence grade 0) from the Framingham and MOST studies were examined by MRI. Meniscal status was assessed with a score of 0–4 in the anterior horn/body/posterior horn of the medial/lateral meniscus and effusion was assessed using a score of 0–3. The odds ratios (ORs) of joint effusion in those with meniscal damage were estimated using a logistic regression model. A subanalysis was performed for knees without MRI-detected cartilage damage.

Results: of 1368 knees, 296 (21.6%) showed meniscal pathology in at least one subregion. Effusion was present in 133 (44.9%) of knees with meniscal damage vs 328 (30.6%) in those without meniscal damage. The adjusted OR of effusion in a knee with meniscal damage was 1.8, 95% confidence intervals (CI) [1.4, 2.4]. The OR of effusion for the group with meniscal pathology in two compartments was 5.4, 95% CI [2.1, 14.3]. For knees without any cartilage lesions but with meniscal damage in any compartment the OR was 2.3, 95% CI [1.1, 4.5].

Conclusions: knees without OA but with meniscal pathology exhibit joint effusion to a significantly higher degree than knees without meniscal damage. The association persists for knees without cartilage damage. The prevalence of effusion is further increased when present in two compartments. Concomitant occurrence of synovial activation and meniscal damage contributes to understanding the pathophysiology of early degenerative joint disease
meniscal tear, magnetic resonance imaging, effusion, osteoarthritis, synovium, knee
1063-4584
748-753
Roemer, F.W.
8044ed78-19c1-4411-a651-16017a1b78f0
Guermazi, A.
b2164f06-6621-449a-8319-eeff0ce9d0ad
Hunter, D.J.
858ea3f1-f56d-4a1f-bac3-a82ca68e89e7
Niu, J.
67a31618-3502-4dfc-80b1-587c043a23aa
Zhang, Y.
f812509d-2a3c-41aa-8ba1-68210952d5a6
Englund, M.
5597b7ab-a0bc-4f6e-a5bb-45b0a70ea44a
Javaid, M.K.
51d3310b-032e-4c15-83ac-b878bce090f3
Lynch, J.A.
a7611753-4ab8-42cd-9dc1-f7fdd298ddb6
Mohr, A.
675bfccd-470d-4072-9ff2-1dd43eefe25d
Torner, J.
9a4e2c43-634c-454a-ae1d-26d35ee4f9ef
Lewis, C.E.
c6d109a8-4d83-4989-8d01-2d8ab8db13a0
Nevitt, M.C.
59d12ce3-5355-4f1f-bada-84281b987c65
Felson, D.T.
c2a29bad-b77b-49fa-aee1-94cd21e23ccc
Roemer, F.W.
8044ed78-19c1-4411-a651-16017a1b78f0
Guermazi, A.
b2164f06-6621-449a-8319-eeff0ce9d0ad
Hunter, D.J.
858ea3f1-f56d-4a1f-bac3-a82ca68e89e7
Niu, J.
67a31618-3502-4dfc-80b1-587c043a23aa
Zhang, Y.
f812509d-2a3c-41aa-8ba1-68210952d5a6
Englund, M.
5597b7ab-a0bc-4f6e-a5bb-45b0a70ea44a
Javaid, M.K.
51d3310b-032e-4c15-83ac-b878bce090f3
Lynch, J.A.
a7611753-4ab8-42cd-9dc1-f7fdd298ddb6
Mohr, A.
675bfccd-470d-4072-9ff2-1dd43eefe25d
Torner, J.
9a4e2c43-634c-454a-ae1d-26d35ee4f9ef
Lewis, C.E.
c6d109a8-4d83-4989-8d01-2d8ab8db13a0
Nevitt, M.C.
59d12ce3-5355-4f1f-bada-84281b987c65
Felson, D.T.
c2a29bad-b77b-49fa-aee1-94cd21e23ccc

Roemer, F.W., Guermazi, A., Hunter, D.J., Niu, J., Zhang, Y., Englund, M., Javaid, M.K., Lynch, J.A., Mohr, A., Torner, J., Lewis, C.E., Nevitt, M.C. and Felson, D.T. (2009) The association of meniscal damage with joint effusion in persons without radiographic osteoarthritis: the Framington and MOST osteoarthritis studies. Osteoarthritis and Cartilage, 17 (6), 748-753. (doi:10.1016/j.joca.2008.09.013). (PMID:19008123)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to assess the cross-sectional association between meniscal status and joint effusion on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in knees without radiographic osteoarthritis (OA).

Design: knees without OA (Kellgren/Lawrence grade 0) from the Framingham and MOST studies were examined by MRI. Meniscal status was assessed with a score of 0–4 in the anterior horn/body/posterior horn of the medial/lateral meniscus and effusion was assessed using a score of 0–3. The odds ratios (ORs) of joint effusion in those with meniscal damage were estimated using a logistic regression model. A subanalysis was performed for knees without MRI-detected cartilage damage.

Results: of 1368 knees, 296 (21.6%) showed meniscal pathology in at least one subregion. Effusion was present in 133 (44.9%) of knees with meniscal damage vs 328 (30.6%) in those without meniscal damage. The adjusted OR of effusion in a knee with meniscal damage was 1.8, 95% confidence intervals (CI) [1.4, 2.4]. The OR of effusion for the group with meniscal pathology in two compartments was 5.4, 95% CI [2.1, 14.3]. For knees without any cartilage lesions but with meniscal damage in any compartment the OR was 2.3, 95% CI [1.1, 4.5].

Conclusions: knees without OA but with meniscal pathology exhibit joint effusion to a significantly higher degree than knees without meniscal damage. The association persists for knees without cartilage damage. The prevalence of effusion is further increased when present in two compartments. Concomitant occurrence of synovial activation and meniscal damage contributes to understanding the pathophysiology of early degenerative joint disease

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More information

Published date: June 2009
Keywords: meniscal tear, magnetic resonance imaging, effusion, osteoarthritis, synovium, knee

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 192823
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/192823
ISSN: 1063-4584
PURE UUID: ec082a48-b3a8-40e1-a05f-d921c9295c85

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Date deposited: 08 Jul 2011 12:34
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 03:52

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Contributors

Author: F.W. Roemer
Author: A. Guermazi
Author: D.J. Hunter
Author: J. Niu
Author: Y. Zhang
Author: M. Englund
Author: M.K. Javaid
Author: J.A. Lynch
Author: A. Mohr
Author: J. Torner
Author: C.E. Lewis
Author: M.C. Nevitt
Author: D.T. Felson

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