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1 eted virtual noncalcium images for traumatic bone marrow edema.
2 epth and cross-sectional area of subchondral bone marrow edema.
3 n in 3 of the control subjects (18%), but no bone marrow edema.
4 l noncalcium images were evaluated to detect bone marrow edema.
5 s to be osteoarthritis, stress fracture, and bone marrow edema.
6 ts, foci of wall susceptibility, osteolysis, bone marrow edema, abductor muscle or tendon abnormality
10 RI showed that 96% had synovitis and 46% had bone marrow edema, and US showed that 73% had gray-scale
12 synovium, and, less commonly, pisotriquetral bone marrow edema are MR imaging findings that may help
15 body, posterior element, and spinous process bone marrow edema (BME) lesions, were scored in a blinde
16 cation and severity of defects of cartilage, bone marrow edema (BME), osteophytes, subchondral cysts,
18 ions of these in clinical practice-urate and bone marrow edema detection, metal artifact reduction, a
19 of 14 bones): cartilage defects, bone cysts, bone marrow edema, fractures, joint debris, joint effusi
22 (VNCa) technique for detection of traumatic bone marrow edema in patients with vertebral compression
24 l outcome and severity of cartilage loss and bone marrow edema in the medial femoral condyle and medi
25 with greater severity of cartilage loss and bone marrow edema in the same compartment as the menisca
26 noncalcium technique may enable depiction of bone marrow edema in thoracolumbar vertebral compression
27 agnostic performance for assessing traumatic bone marrow edema in vertebral compression fractures.
28 epth and cross-sectional area of subchondral bone marrow edema increased with increasing grade of the
30 miquantitative Leeds Scoring System in which bone marrow edema is graded from 0 to 3 according to sev
32 eral collateral ligament tears, and 85.3% of bone marrow edema lesions identified on images obtained
34 were used to evaluate the relation of medial bone marrow edema lesions to medial progression and late
35 llateral ligament tears, meniscal tears, and bone marrow edema lesions within the knee joint at 3.0 T
36 cruciate ligament tears, meniscal tears, and bone marrow edema lesions, first by using routine MR and
39 ficantly less subchondral bone attrition and bone marrow edema-like abnormalities in the knee as asse
41 as a significantly greater degree of diffuse bone marrow edema (median of 6.5 tarsal bones versus 2 a
44 alyzed by two readers for cartilage lesions, bone marrow edema pattern, and ligamentous and meniscal
49 and lumbar spine that were scored for active bone marrow edema representative of acute inflammation,
50 ylosing spondylitis, present in MRI include: bone marrow edema, sclerosis, fat metaplasia, formation
51 eviewed for findings including hernia, pubic bone marrow edema, secondary cleft sign, and rectus abdo
52 magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of transient bone marrow edema syndrome (TBMES) and avascular osteone
53 is indicated by the presence of subchondral bone marrow edema, synovitis, bursitis, or enthesitis.
54 s a group of patients with more severe axial bone marrow edema that is likely related to the classic
56 ess the post-ESWT changes in soft-tissue and bone marrow edema, the thickness of the proximal plantar
57 n to adjacent cartilage and underlying bone, bone marrow edema underneath graft, and contour of bone
59 was no significant association between total bone marrow edema volume and preoperative or postoperati
65 patients without synovitis), pisotriquetral bone marrow edema was seen only in patients with synovit
66 correlate MR imaging findings of subchondral bone marrow edema with the arthroscopic grade of articul
67 the size, depth, and location of subchondral bone marrow edema without knowledge of the arthroscopic
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