Radiology Case Reports (May 2024)

Sodium fluoride PET/CT with arthrography for cartilage evaluation of the knee

  • Alina van de Burgt, MSc,
  • Rachèl E.L. Hezemans, MD,
  • Frits Smit, MD,
  • Menno R. Bénard, PhD,
  • Joris A. Jansen, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 5
pp. 1855 – 1858

Abstract

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The presence of healthy cartilage in the knee joint, featuring smooth articular surfaces, is crucial for normal physiological knee function. However, noninvasive in-vivo assessment of cartilage quality in the knee remains challenging and has not been thoroughly investigated. We aimed to illustrate two clinical cases, a 62-year-old male and a 67-year-old male, presented to the orthopaedic outpatient clinic with severe knee complaints. The novel combination of sodium fluoride-18 positron emission tomography/computed tomography and intra-articular injection of a contrast agent (Na[18F]F-PET/CT arthrography) was performed to evaluate cartilage defects of the knee as part of a prospective patient study. The lesion size observed on the Na[18F]F-PET was substantially larger compared to the findings on CT. This might indicate that Na[18F]F-PET/CT arthrography was able to image osseous and chondral pathological changes in an early stage and in a single procedure. Na[18F]F-PET/CT arthrography is a promising imaging technique and might extend the diagnostic potential of nuclear and radiological imaging in the evaluation of cartilage defects.

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