Anteroposterior radiographic view of the knee. An unreliable indicator of bone damage.

Category Primary study
JournalClinical rheumatology
Year 1988
The clinician and/or radiologist uses standard radiographic views to assess bony changes in the joints of patients with both potential and established arthritis. Using AP (standing) views, we recorded the number of osteophytes and/or subchondral cysts seen on both nonarthritic and arthritic tibial tables and their respective plateaus. These data were compared with the number of osteophytes and/or subchondral cysts observed on "en face" views taken of the same tibial tables after they were resected from the knee joints. Not all of the osteophytes or subchondral cysts present in these tibial tables were detected with the AP view. Narrow osteophytes and those located at extreme anterior or posterior positions on a plateau were missed. Single cysts scattered across a plateau were also not seen. We found that the standard AP view gave an inaccurate measure of the amount of bone damage actually present in the tibial tables of arthritic knees.
Epistemonikos ID: afe2cd363d4051670060db76934b4597eede7f1d
First added on: May 25, 2023