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1  effects, in part, by increasing the risk of meniscal damage.
2 ation, subchondral bone (SCB) sclerosis, and meniscal damage.
3 valgus malalignment with progressive lateral meniscal damage.
4 relatively lower MCCT values tend to develop meniscal damage after low-energy activity.
5  There was also a strong association between meniscal damage and cartilage loss.
6 everal MR features (eg, bone marrow lesions, meniscal damage and extrusion, and synovitis or effusion
7 ed and older adults, any association between meniscal damage and the development of frequent knee pai
8  we found no independent association between meniscal damage and the development of frequent knee sym
9 cted tibial and femoral loss included medial meniscal damage and varus malalignment (medially) and la
10 in seems to be present because both pain and meniscal damage are related to OA and not because of a d
11 each predictor (meniscal position factor and meniscal damage as dichotomous predictors in each model)
12 ned lateral cartilage damage and progressive meniscal damage as increases in cartilage or meniscus sc
13 n, MRI is more sensitive for ligamentous and meniscal damage but less specific.
14  body mass index (BMI), bone marrow lesions, meniscal damage/extrusion, synovitis, effusion, and prev
15  paucity of data regarding the prevalence of meniscal damage in the general population and the associ
16 nd varus malalignment (medially) and lateral meniscal damage (laterally).
17    The aim of this study was to test whether meniscal damage, meniscal extrusion, malalignment, and l
18 d for cartilage damage, bone marrow lesions, meniscal damage, meniscal extrusion, synovitis, and effu
19                    To evaluate the effect of meniscal damage on the development of frequent knee pain
20                                      Lateral meniscal damage predicted every lateral outcome.
21                After full adjustment, medial meniscal damage predicted medial tibial cartilage volume
22 h there was a modest association between the meniscal damage score (range 0-3) and the development of
23  cartilage damage, the presence of high BMI, meniscal damage, synovitis or effusion, or any severe ba
24 nded to the case-control status assessed the meniscal damage using the following scale: 0 = intact, 1
25                                The effect of meniscal damage was analyzed by contingency tables and l
26                                              Meniscal damage was common at baseline both in case knee
27 adjusted for age, sex, and body mass index), meniscal damage was mostly present in knees with OA.
28                                Cartilage and meniscal damage were scored on MRI in the medial and lat