Comparison of conventional radiography and MDCT in suspected scaphoid fractures

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Comparison of conventional radiography and MDCT in suspected scaphoid fractures. / Behzadi, Cyrus; Karul, Murat; Henes, Frank Oliver; Laqmani, Azien; Catalá-Lehnen, Philip; Lehmann, Wolfgang; Nagel, Hans-Dieter; Adam, Gerhard; Regier, Marc.

in: World J Radiol, Jahrgang 7, Nr. 1, 28.01.2015, S. 22-7.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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Behzadi, C, Karul, M, Henes, FO, Laqmani, A, Catalá-Lehnen, P, Lehmann, W, Nagel, H-D, Adam, G & Regier, M 2015, 'Comparison of conventional radiography and MDCT in suspected scaphoid fractures', World J Radiol, Jg. 7, Nr. 1, S. 22-7. https://doi.org/10.4329/wjr.v7.i1.22

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@article{f5529fe3872841a7862c201c087ebc94,
title = "Comparison of conventional radiography and MDCT in suspected scaphoid fractures",
abstract = "AIM: To determine the diagnostic accuracy and radiation dose of conventional radiography and multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) in suspected scaphoid fractures.METHODS: One hundred twenty-four consecutive patients were enrolled in our study who had suffered from a wrist trauma and showed typical clinical symptoms suspicious of an acute scaphoid fracture. All patients had initially undergone conventional radiography. Subsequent MDCT was performed within 10 d because of persisting clinical symptoms. Using the MDCT data as the reference standard, a fourfold table was used to classify the test results. The effective dose and impaired energy were assessed in order to compare the radiation burden of the two techniques. The Wilcoxon test was performed to compare the two diagnostic modalities.RESULTS: Conventional radiography showed 34 acute fractures of the scaphoid in 124 patients (42.2%). Subsequent MDCT revealed a total of 42 scaphoid fractures. The sensitivity of conventional radiography for scaphoid fracture detection was 42.8% and its specificity was 80% resulting in an overall accuracy of 59.6%. Conventional radiography was significantly inferior to MDCT (P < 0.01) concerning scaphoid fracture detection. The mean effective dose of MDCT was 0.1 mSv compared to 0.002 mSv of conventional radiography.CONCLUSION: Conventional radiography is insufficient for accurate scaphoid fracture detection. Regarding the almost negligible effective dose, MDCT should serve as the first imaging modality in wrist trauma.",
author = "Cyrus Behzadi and Murat Karul and Henes, {Frank Oliver} and Azien Laqmani and Philip Catal{\'a}-Lehnen and Wolfgang Lehmann and Hans-Dieter Nagel and Gerhard Adam and Marc Regier",
year = "2015",
month = jan,
day = "28",
doi = "10.4329/wjr.v7.i1.22",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "22--7",
journal = "World J Radiol",
issn = "1949-8470",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Comparison of conventional radiography and MDCT in suspected scaphoid fractures

AU - Behzadi, Cyrus

AU - Karul, Murat

AU - Henes, Frank Oliver

AU - Laqmani, Azien

AU - Catalá-Lehnen, Philip

AU - Lehmann, Wolfgang

AU - Nagel, Hans-Dieter

AU - Adam, Gerhard

AU - Regier, Marc

PY - 2015/1/28

Y1 - 2015/1/28

N2 - AIM: To determine the diagnostic accuracy and radiation dose of conventional radiography and multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) in suspected scaphoid fractures.METHODS: One hundred twenty-four consecutive patients were enrolled in our study who had suffered from a wrist trauma and showed typical clinical symptoms suspicious of an acute scaphoid fracture. All patients had initially undergone conventional radiography. Subsequent MDCT was performed within 10 d because of persisting clinical symptoms. Using the MDCT data as the reference standard, a fourfold table was used to classify the test results. The effective dose and impaired energy were assessed in order to compare the radiation burden of the two techniques. The Wilcoxon test was performed to compare the two diagnostic modalities.RESULTS: Conventional radiography showed 34 acute fractures of the scaphoid in 124 patients (42.2%). Subsequent MDCT revealed a total of 42 scaphoid fractures. The sensitivity of conventional radiography for scaphoid fracture detection was 42.8% and its specificity was 80% resulting in an overall accuracy of 59.6%. Conventional radiography was significantly inferior to MDCT (P < 0.01) concerning scaphoid fracture detection. The mean effective dose of MDCT was 0.1 mSv compared to 0.002 mSv of conventional radiography.CONCLUSION: Conventional radiography is insufficient for accurate scaphoid fracture detection. Regarding the almost negligible effective dose, MDCT should serve as the first imaging modality in wrist trauma.

AB - AIM: To determine the diagnostic accuracy and radiation dose of conventional radiography and multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) in suspected scaphoid fractures.METHODS: One hundred twenty-four consecutive patients were enrolled in our study who had suffered from a wrist trauma and showed typical clinical symptoms suspicious of an acute scaphoid fracture. All patients had initially undergone conventional radiography. Subsequent MDCT was performed within 10 d because of persisting clinical symptoms. Using the MDCT data as the reference standard, a fourfold table was used to classify the test results. The effective dose and impaired energy were assessed in order to compare the radiation burden of the two techniques. The Wilcoxon test was performed to compare the two diagnostic modalities.RESULTS: Conventional radiography showed 34 acute fractures of the scaphoid in 124 patients (42.2%). Subsequent MDCT revealed a total of 42 scaphoid fractures. The sensitivity of conventional radiography for scaphoid fracture detection was 42.8% and its specificity was 80% resulting in an overall accuracy of 59.6%. Conventional radiography was significantly inferior to MDCT (P < 0.01) concerning scaphoid fracture detection. The mean effective dose of MDCT was 0.1 mSv compared to 0.002 mSv of conventional radiography.CONCLUSION: Conventional radiography is insufficient for accurate scaphoid fracture detection. Regarding the almost negligible effective dose, MDCT should serve as the first imaging modality in wrist trauma.

U2 - 10.4329/wjr.v7.i1.22

DO - 10.4329/wjr.v7.i1.22

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 25628802

VL - 7

SP - 22

EP - 27

JO - World J Radiol

JF - World J Radiol

SN - 1949-8470

IS - 1

ER -