Detecting articular cartilage defects in the knee is important because the
signs and symptoms associated with such defects can be confused clinically
with meniscal tears, synovial problems, and extensor mechanism dysfunction.
(19) Unfortunately, cartilage is not visualized on conventional radiodraphs
. Therefore, purely chondral lesions require standard arthrography, compute
d arthrotomography, magnetic resonance (MR) arthrography, or arthroscopy fo
r accurate diagnosis. Unless there is a large free fragment, standard arthr
ography and computed arthrotomography are often nondiagnostic. MR imaging h
as been used to evaluate articular cartilage, although adequate imaging of
articular cartilage remains difficult owing to the nonuniform composition o
f its structural architecture.
In the past, many MR imaging techniques have been applied to the assessment
of articular cartilage. A standard spin-echo MR imaging technique alone is
generally inadequate to evaluate articular cartilage. Standard spin-echo t
echnique combined with fat suppression has the added advantage of improving
contrast between cartilage and fluid; however, it too is inadequate. Most
simple gradient echo sequences do not allow detection of superficial or min
or lesions of articular cartilage. A more advanced gradient echo technique
has been developed, which has been advocated as the optimal technique for e
valuation of cartilage; it is a spoiled gradient echo sequence using fat su
ppression and three-dimensional (3D) acquisition (SPGR) (Fig. 1). With this
sequence, spatial resolution is high owing to the ability to obtain thin c
ontiguous slices; the images can be reformatted in multiple planes; and the
re are high contrast-to-noise ratios between cartilage and fluid and betwee
n cartilage and bone(17) (Fig.2). Using SPCR MR imaging, the trilaminar app
earance of the articular cartilage can be seen. The technique can be used t
o evaluate cartilage degeneration, demonstrating loss of signal in a superf
icial bright layer and varying degrees of loss of signal in intermediate an
d deep layers within the cartilage.
Other MR imaging techniques used for cartilage analysis are subtraction mag
netization-transfer contrast in-caging, short echo time projec-evidence of
cartilage abnormality on MR images relates to the identification of fluid a
t the interface between the fragment and the parent bone. The MR imaging te
chnique influences dramatically whether such fluid is identified. MR arthro
graphy employing the intra-articular injection of gadolinium compounds can
be advantageous in the delineation of the chondral surface and in the detec
tion of intraarticular bodies. Optimally, MR imaging would allow direct ana
lysis of the cartilage surface, and specific imaging sequences that are mos
t suited to this analysis are still evolving.