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MR Appearance of Cartilage In Different Age Groups

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Okay, here are three sagittal

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gradient echo sequences.

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On the left, we have a 20-day-old.

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In the middle, we have an eight-month-old.

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And on the right, we have a 14-year-old.

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So this, I think, best illustrates how an

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infant really isn't a small child, and a

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small child really isn't an adolescent.

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Look at the difference in the

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cartilage in these three patients.

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Here, there is a very large cartilage.

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heterogeneous gray appearance

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of the epiphyseal cartilage.

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The amount of epiphyseal cartilage,

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zonoprovisional calcification, and the

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metaphysis right here, the spongiosa, is a

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lot wider, a lot bigger, a lot more involved.

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Look at the degree of darkness, if

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you will, of your medullary cavity.

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You notice that it's not as dark; that

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means that it's not as well trabeculated.

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You still have a lot of hematopoietic marrow

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that's contributing to the signal here.

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Uh, contrast that to a slightly

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older child, eight months old.

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Look how much more differentiated

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some of these structures are.

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You can get a nice clear view

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of the content of the epiphysis.

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You can see the articular cartilage is

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very well defined here, nice and bright.

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You can see the physis; the trilaminar

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appearance is getting to be what we

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looked like, what we described previously.

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You can see again.

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This is the hypertrophic zone of cartilage.

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This is the zone of provisional

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calcification; that's dark.

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And immediately above that is the spongiosa

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of the metaphysis, very clearly seen.

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And the distance between these three structures

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is a lot smaller than the distance over

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here, meaning that this has less growth

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potential now, really, than this does.

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Okay?

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Now, finally, let's look at somebody who is

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approaching adulthood, but not quite there yet.

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We know they're not quite there yet

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because the physis is still open.

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Whereas this person, an adult, the

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physis would be completely closed.

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Uh, we can't appreciate the tri-

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laminar appearance very well anymore.

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Maybe a hint of it over here.

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Here's the dark area.

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Here's a little bit of brightness.

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And so this brightness really is

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just still the hypertrophic cartilage

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cells that we're looking at, right?

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But look how much more of it is still open.

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has been ossified.

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And this, the majority of what's left over

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on the periphery, is articular cartilage.

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And look how the articular cartilage

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isn't quite as bright as the articular

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cartilage in the younger person over here.

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Also, look at now the physis or the area

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where metaphysis transitions to epiphysis.

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Every so often as you go through there, there

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are areas where there's a little bridge.

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Right?

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So what's happening is this physis is

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about to close, and that's what happens.

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It doesn't close all of a sudden;

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you know, one day it's bright,

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and the next day it's all black.

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What happens is little areas like this,

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little tongues of tissue, if you will, come

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together and bone forms at that location.

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And eventually, when this is

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completely dark, that means the

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physis has completely scarred down.

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Uh, so we call it a scar.

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It's not really a scar.

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It's scarred down.

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Uh, and you no longer can differentiate

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metaphyseal bone from epiphyseal bone,

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and you've got complete maturation.

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But it's a process.

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It goes from here, to here, to here.

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One other thing I want you to notice on

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this sort of adult pattern is, in the

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articular cartilage, in the weight-bearing

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surfaces, there's a little bit of darkness

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in the articular cartilage that you

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really can't appreciate in any of these.

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And I wonder if you can guess why that is.

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Well, what's happening with the adolescent?

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They're running, they're jumping,

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they're having activities.

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So some of the fluid in the weight-

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bearing surfaces is getting taken away.

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So there's some degree of

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desiccation, if you will, that's happening.

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And because of that, you do

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get some areas of darkness.

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So it's important not to see

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that and call it pathology.

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It's important not to call

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that area of darkness

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cartilage damage.

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That is just simple, normal

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wear and tear that happens.

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Often it's located at the

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weight-bearing surfaces.

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So you can see, again, you can see also

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here in the proximal tibia, here, and here.

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So this is a really good example, I think,

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of the progression of how the secondary

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ossification center in the epiphysis expands,

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the marrow gets filled with trabecular

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bone, and you have increased susceptibility

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and eventual closure of the physis.

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And you no longer have growth

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and maturation has been achieved.

Report

Faculty

Mahesh Thapa, MD, MEd, FAAP

Division Chief of Musculoskeletal Imaging, and Director of Diagnostic Imaging Professor

Seattle Children's & University of Washington

Tags

Pediatrics

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Congenital

Acquired/Developmental

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