Defining Normal Articular Characteristics of the Primary Joints of the Foot and Ankle: A 3D Hounsfield Algorithm Weight Bearing CT Study

Category: Ankle Arthritis; Hindfoot Introduction/Purpose: To properly treat osteoarthritis-(OA) patients, a grading-system is used to diagnose the stage-of-the- disease. The current gold-standard system, which relies on plain-2D-radiographs, is subjective, categorical, and lacks reliability. Using W...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inFoot & ankle orthopaedics Vol. 8; no. 4
Main Authors Stebral, Hannah J., Tazegul, Tutku, Jasper, Ryan, Mallavarapu, Vineel, Schmidt, Eli, Carvalho, Kepler A.M., Mansur, Nacime Salomao Barbachan, Chrea, Bopha, Anderson, Donald D., de Cesar Netto, Cesar
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Los Angeles, CA SAGE Publications 01.12.2023
Sage Publications Ltd
SAGE Publishing
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Category: Ankle Arthritis; Hindfoot Introduction/Purpose: To properly treat osteoarthritis-(OA) patients, a grading-system is used to diagnose the stage-of-the- disease. The current gold-standard system, which relies on plain-2D-radiographs, is subjective, categorical, and lacks reliability. Using WBCT-images, 3D-Hounsfield-Unit-(HU) algorithms have been developed to measure the intensity of each image voxel across the joint-space, highlighting transitions between cancellous/subchondral bone and joint-space. The purpose of this study was to analyze and define normal standard values of joint-space-width (JSW) in the four essential joints of the foot-and-ankle (tibiotalar (ankle), subtalar (ST), talonavicular (TN), and first-metatarsophalangeal- (MTP) -joints) using an objective computational WBCT-HU algorithm in healthy non-arthritic feet. We hypothesized that the measurements of JSW and HU distributions across each of the four-essential-joints of the foot-and-ankle would be significantly different from each other, respecting local anatomy and unique functional characteristics of each joint. Methods: Retrospective-comparative-study, we evaluated WBCT-scans of 30 healthy ankle-joints, 28 ST-joints, 26-TN joints, and 30 1st-MTP-joints of control volunteers with no radiographic signs of foot-and-ankle OA. For each-joint, we used dedicated software to define a volume-of-interest (VOI) cube centered on the joint space. Five HU linear search arrays were then defined within this 3D VOI perpendicular to the articular-surface of each-joint, including four projections in each quadrant, and one in the center of the VOI (Figure 1). Image intensity profiles were generated for each search array crossing the transition from cancellous- to-subchondral bone, across the joint-space, back to subchondral-and-cancellous-bone (Figure 2). This profile was used to calculate JSW and to measure HU contrast in the region. Comparisons between the JSW of each joint and within each-joint were accordingly performed using paired t-tests or paired Wilcoxon. Significance was considered for p-values < 0.05. Results: The median-value and 95%-Confidence-Intervals-(CI) for JSW were 4.07mm [CI:3.73–4.20] for the ankle-joint; 4.07mm [3.95–4.44] for the ST-joint; 3.24mm [3.19–3.46] for the TN-joint; and 3.70mm [3.64–4.12] for the 1st-MTP-joint. The TN JSW was significantly narrower than the JSW in the ankle (p=0.0007), ST (p < 0.0002), and 1st-MTP-joints (p=0.0034) (Figure-3). JSW- values were similar across the entire ankle, ST and 1st-MTP-joints. In the TN-joint, the dorsal aspect of the joint was found to be slightly but significantly wider-than the plantar-aspect (p < 0.001). Regarding HU-contrast, we found a progressive increase in the overall contrast from proximal-to-distal (p < 0.001), with a mean HU contrast-value and 95%-CI of respectively 71.8[67.3–76.3] for ankle, 92.4[87.8–97.1] for ST, 84.1[79.2–88.9] for TN, and 101.3[96.9 – 106.8] for 1st-MTP-joints. The only joints with similar HU-contrast were ST and TN. Conclusion: We utilized a novel WBCT-3D-HU measurement algorithm to assess the normal JSW and HU contrast of the four- essential mobile joints of the foot-and-ankle. We found the JSW to be similar (~4mm) in the ankle, ST, and 1st-MTP joints. The TN-joint however, demonstrated a significantly narrower JSW when compared to the other 3 joints. HU-contrast increased progressively from proximal-to-distal, being less prominent in the ankle, similarly increased in TN and ST, and maximum at the 1st-MTP joint. This study's joint characteristic normality data provide a foundation for future-work developing an objective WBCT-based 3D HU-algorithm staging-system for OA-disease-progression in the foot-and-ankle joints.
ISSN:2473-0114
2473-0114
DOI:10.1177/2473011423S00140