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      Correlation of power Doppler sonography with vascularity of the synovial tissue of the knee joint in patients with osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis

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          Abstract

          To examine the significance of power Doppler sonography (PDS) in the diagnosis of synovial hypertrophy of the knee joint by verifying and comparing the PDS findings with histopathologic findings of synovial membrane vascularity. The knee joints of 23 patients who were undergoing arthroplasty of the knee joint because of osteoarthritis or rheumatoid arthritis were examined with ultrasound before arthroplasty. The vascularity of the synovial membrane was classified semiquantitatively using PDS. A sample of synovial tissue was obtained during the arthroplasty, and the vascularity of the synovial tissue was evaluated by immunohistochemistry (factor VIII) and was graded qualitatively by a pathologist who was unaware of the PDS findings. The visual qualitative grading by the examiner was controlled by analyzing PDS images and histologic samples using a digital image evaluation system. The correlation between the qualitative PDS results and the qualitative grading of the vascularity by the pathologist was 0.89 by Spearman's rho (P < 0.01). The Pearson correlation coefficient between the digital analysis of the PDS images and the digital analysis of the tissue sections was 0.81 (P < 0.01). Digital image analysis and qualitative grading by the examiner had a correlation of 0.89 by Spearman's p (P < 0.01) for the PDS images. The correlation between the qualitative estimation of vascularity by the pathologist and the digital image analysis was 0.88 by Spearman's rho (P < 0.01). In the present study, PDS proved to be a reliable diagnostic method for qualitative grading of the vascularity of the synovial tissue. In clinical practice, PDS allows further differentiation of the hypertrophic synovium.

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          Instrumentation and physical factors related to visualization of stenotic and regurgitant jets by Doppler color flow mapping.

          David Sahn (1988)
          Major clinical uses of the new Doppler color flow mapping technologies involve the imaging of disturbed flow through cardiac defects or valves. Nevertheless, there is little general understanding of the determinants of flow and of how flow is imaged by these new systems. This review will attempt to relate the hydrodynamics through a simplified stenotic or regurgitant orifice with the physics and sampling theories relevant to the functioning of Doppler color flow mapping systems. The goal will be to characterize the velocity resolution, spatial resolution, sensitivity and performance of these systems so that clinicians can understand why flow looks the way it does on Doppler color studies and which aspects of flow mapping can be expected to become more quantifiable than they are at present.

            Author and article information

            Journal
            Arthritis & Rheumatism
            Arthritis & Rheumatism
            Wiley
            0004-3591
            1529-0131
            February 2001
            February 2001
            2001
            : 44
            : 2
            : 331-338
            Article
            10.1002/1529-0131(200102)44:2<331::AID-ANR50>3.0.CO;2-0
            11229463
            69c75a8e-b7d7-4577-a058-5a5086bebb57
            © 2001

            http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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