Flattening of the talar dome is observed clinically in haemarthropathy as structural and functional changes advance but has not been quantified yet. In order to confirm clinical observation, and assess the degree of change, morphological measurements were derived from MR images. Four measurements were taken, using ImageJ (1.52v), from sagittal MRI projections at three locations – medial, lateral and central: Trochlear Tali Arc Length (TaAL), Talar Height (TaH), Trochlear Tali Length (TaL), and Trochlear Tali Radius (TaR). These measurements were used to generate three ratios of interest: TaR:TaAL, TaAL:TaL, and TaL:TaH. With the hypothesis of a flattening of the talar dome with haemarthropathy, it was expected that TaR:TaAL and TaL:TaH should be greater for haemophilic ankles, and TaAL:TaL should be smaller. A total of 126 MR images (ethics: MEEC 18–022) were included to assess the difference in those ratios between non-diseased ankles (33 images from 11 volunteers) and haemophilic ankles (93 images from 8 patients’ ankles). Non-diseased control measurements were compared to literature to assess the capacity of doing measurements on MRI instead of radiographs or CT.Abstract
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