Increased Vascularity in the Neonatal versus Adult Meniscus: Evaluation with Magnetic Resonance Imaging.

TitleIncreased Vascularity in the Neonatal versus Adult Meniscus: Evaluation with Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsLin KM, Gadinsky NE, Klinger CE, Dyke JP, Rodeo SA, Green DW, Fabricant PD, Helfet DL, Shea KG, Lazaro LE
JournalCartilage
Volume13
Issue2_suppl
Pagination1562S-1569S
Date Published2021 12
ISSN1947-6043
KeywordsAdult, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Menisci, Tibial
Abstract

. Quantification of meniscus vascularity has been limited with previous techniques, and minimal data exist describing differential vascular zones in the skeletally immature meniscus. The objective of this study is to use quantitative contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to compare meniscal vascularity in neonatal specimens with adults. We hypothesized that the developing meniscus has greater and more uniform vascularity throughout all zones. . Ten fresh-frozen human cadaveric knees (5 neonatal, age 0-6 months; 5 adult, 34-67 years) underwent gadolinium-enhanced MRI using an established vascularity quantification protocol. Regions of interest corresponding to peripheral and central zones of the meniscus were identified on pre-contrast coronal images, and signal enhancement within the same regions (normalized against background tissue) was compared between pre- and post-contrast images. . The medial and lateral menisci had similar distribution of perfusion (45.8% ± 8.1% medial vs. 54.2% ± 8.1% lateral in neonatal knees; 50.6% ± 11.3% medial vs. 49.4% ± 11.3% lateral in adult knees, = 0.47). Increased perfusion was demonstrated in the periphery compared with the central zone (2.3:1 in neonatal knees and 3.25:1 in adult knees, = 0.31). Neonatal specimens demonstrated 6.0-fold greater overall post-contrast meniscal signal enhancement compared with adults ( < 0.0001), with the 0-month specimen demonstrating the greatest proportional signal enhancement. . While blood flow to the periphery is greater than to central zones in all menisci, younger menisci receive proportionally greater overall blood flow compared to adults, including to the central zone, suggesting that the immature meniscus is a more biologically active tissue than its adult counterpart.

DOI10.1177/1947603520923143
Alternate JournalCartilage
PubMed ID32447965
PubMed Central IDPMC8804749
Related Institute: 
MRI Research Institute (MRIRI)

Weill Cornell Medicine
Department of Radiology
525 East 68th Street New York, NY 10065