Whole body magnetic resonance imaging in healthy children and adolescents. Bone marrow appearances of the axial skeleton
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26825Date
2022-06-27Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
von Brandis, Elisabeth; Zadig, Pia Karin Karlsen; Avenarius, Derk Frederik Matthaus; Flatø, Berit; Knudsen, Per Kristian; Lilleby, Vibke; Nguyen, Bac; Rosendahl, Karen; Müller, Lil-Sofie OrdingAbstract
Material and methods - We assessed the bone marrow of the mandible, shoulder girdle, thorax, spine, and pelvis on water-only Dixon T2W sequences as part of a whole-body MRI protocol in 196 healthy and asymptomatic children aged 5–19 years. Intensity (0–2 scale) and extension (1–4 scale) of focal high signal areas in the bone marrow were scored and divided into minor or major findings, based on intensity and extension to identify the potentially conspicuous lesions in a clinical setting.
Results - We registered 415 areas of increased signal in the axial skeleton whereof 75 (38.3%) were major findings. Fifty-eight (29.6%) individuals had at least one major finding, mainly located in the pelvis (54, 72%). We found no differences according to gender. The number of minor findings increased with age (p = 0.020), but there were no significant differences in the number of major findings. The most conspicuous findings were in the pelvis, spine and sternum.
Conclusion - Non-specific bone marrow T2W hyperintensities in the axial skeleton are frequently detected on whole-body MRI in healthy, asymptomatic children. Awareness of this is important as some findings may resemble clinically silent lesions in children with suspected multifocal skeletal disease.