• Emergency radiology · Dec 2005

    Coronal oblique turbo STIR imaging of the sacrum and sacroiliac joints at routine MR imaging of the lumbar spine.

    • Tadhg G Gleeson, Martin J O'Connell, Deirdre Duke, Martin Ryan, Rachel Ennis, and Stephen J Eustace.
    • Department of Radiology, Mater Misericordiae University Hospital, Eccles St., Dublin 7, Ireland. tadhggleeson@hotmail.com
    • Emerg Radiol. 2005 Dec 1;12(1-2):38-43.

    AbstractThe objective of the study was to evaluate the clinical impact of coronal oblique imaging of the lumbrosacral junction and the sacrum at initial presentation for MR imaging of the lumbar spine in patients presenting with low back pain or sciatic pain. Two hundred and sixty consecutive patients attending for MRI of the lumbar spine underwent simultaneous coronal oblique turbo short tau inversion recovery (STIR; TR 2500, TE 40, TI 150, echo train length 7, number of scan acquisitions 2) imaging of the sacrum and the sacroiliac joints with a field of view of 30-cm and 3-mm slices (acquisition time 3 min and 20 s). Images were reviewed by two experienced radiologists to determine the cause of back pain, with and without images of the sacrum and sacroiliac joints. The added value of the additional sequence was assessed. Correlation was made with surgery, response to nerve root injection or clinical follow-up at 3 months. Subgroup analysis was performed to determine if patient stratification according to sex or symptoms would be useful. In total, in 19 of 260 patients (7.3%), abnormalities were identified at coronal STIR imaging. In 7 of 260 patients (2.7%), pathology was identified in the sacrum thought to account for back pain, altering the diagnosis made on the standard sequences. These diagnoses were sacroiliitis (n=2), sacral stress fracture (n=1), degenerative sacroiliac joints (n=1), degenerative accessory articulation between the lumbar spine and the sacrum (n=1), Tarlov cyst of nerve root (n=1) and retroverted uterus causing sciatic pain (n=1). Patient stratification according to sex or the presence or absence of sciatic symptoms was not useful in predicting the added benefit of the additional sequence. Routine coronal STIR imaging of the sacrum as part of lumbar spine MRI improves assessment of patients presenting with low back pain or sciatica in only a small number of patients.

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