4D in vivo quantification of ankle joint space width using dynamic MRI

2019 
Spatio-temporal evolution of joint space width (JSW) during motion is of great importance to help with making early treatment plans for degenerative joint diseases like osteoarthritis (OA). These diseases can affect people of all ages leading to an acceleration of joint degeneration and to limitations in the activities of daily living. However, only a few studies have attempted to quantify the JSW from moving joints. In this paper, we present a generic pipeline to accurately determine the changes of the JSW during the joint motion cycle. The key idea is to combine spatial information of static MRI with temporal information of low-resolution (LR) dynamic MRI sequences via an intensity-based registration framework, leading to a high-resolution (HR) temporal reconstruction of the joint. This allows the temporal JSW to be measured in the HR domain using an Eulerian approach for solving partial differential equations (PDEs) inside a deforming inter-bone area where the HR reconstructed bone segmentations are considered as temporal Dirichlet boundaries. The proposed approach has been applied and evaluated on in vivo MRI data of five healthy children to non-invasively quantify the spatio-temporal evolution of the JSW of the ankle (tibiotalar joint) during the entire dorsi-plantar flexion motion cycle. Promising results were obtained, showing that this pipeline can be useful to perform large-scale studies containing subjects with OA for different joints like ankle and knee.
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