Journal of orthopaedic research : official publication of the Orthopaedic Research Society
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A quadrature knee coil was used in conjunction with a magnetic resonance imaging scanner for quantitation of test phantom volumes, ex vivo bovine cartilage thickness, and in vivo human articular cartilage volumes. Optimal magnetic resonance parameters were obtained by testing a series of spin-echo and gradient-echo pulse sequences to determine the sequence that provided the highest resolution of articular cartilage and best defined the cartilage interfaces with synovial fluid and subchondral bone. Extensive testing revealed that two sequences were required to define articular cartilage accurately: a spoiled gradient-echo sequence and a steady state free-precession sequence. ⋯ The interscan reproducibility was greater than 98%. These data demonstrate that improved magnetic resonance pulse sequencing, in conjunction with three-dimensional reconstruction and measurement techniques, can accurately and reproducibly measure the volume of articular cartilage. Clinical application of this approach offers the potential for early diagnosis of osteoarthritis and for serial, noninvasive assessment of changes in articular cartilage volume in response to therapeutic modalities.