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Wide field of view CT and acromioclavicular joint instability: A technical innovation
Author(s) -
Dyer David R,
Troupis John M,
Kamali Moaveni Afshin
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of medical imaging and radiation oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.31
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1754-9485
pISSN - 1754-9477
DOI - 10.1111/1754-9485.12283
Subject(s) - acromioclavicular joint , medicine , grading (engineering) , radiology , surgery , engineering , civil engineering
Summary A 21‐year‐old female with a traumatic shoulder injury is investigated and managed for symptoms relating to this injury. Pathology at the acromioclavicular joint is detected clinically; however, clinical examination and multiple imaging modalities do not reach a unified diagnosis on the grading of this acromioclavicular joint injury. When management appropriate to that suggested injury grading fail to help the patient's symptoms, further investigation methods were utilised. Wide field of view, dynamic CT (4 D CT ) is conducted on the patient's affected shoulder using a 320 × 0.5 mm detector multislice CT . Scans were conducted with a static table as the patient completed three movements of the affected shoulder. Capturing multiple data sets per second over a z ‐axis of 16 cm, measurements of the acromioclavicular joint were made, to show dynamic changes at the joint. Acromioclavicular ( AC ) joint translations were witnessed in three planes (a previously unrecognised pathology in the grading of acromioclavicular joint injuries). Translation in multiple planes was also not evident on careful clinical examination of this patient. AC joint width, anterior‐posterior translation, superior‐inferior translation and coracoclavicular width were measured with planar reconstructions while volume‐rendered images and dynamic sequences aiding visual understanding of the pathology. Wide field of view dynamic CT (4 D CT ) is an accurate and quick modality to diagnose complex acromioclavicular joint injury. It provides dynamic information that no other modality can; 4 D CT shows future benefits for clinical approach to diagnosis and management of acromioclavicular joint injury, and other musculoskeletal pathologies.