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The complex anatomy and the requirement to image in the peripheral magnetic field have made the shoulder difficult to examine with MR. However, the use of high-resolution scanning techniques and specialized surface coils has improved the quality of MR images obtained. Seventy-five scans of the shoulders of normal volunteers were correlated with multiplanar cryomicrosections of six cadaver shoulders to study the MR appearance of normal structures. MR was shown to provide excellent depiction of shoulder anatomy.
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M. L. Sein, J. Walton, J. Linklater, C. Harris, T. Dugal, R. Appleyard, B. Kirkbride, D. Kuah, and G. A C Murrell Reliability of MRI assessment of supraspinatus tendinopathy Br. J. Sports Med., August 1, 2007; 41(8): e9 - e9. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Miniaci, P. A. Dowdy, K. R. Willits, and A. D. Vellet Magnetic Resonance Imaging Evaluation of the Rotator Cuff Tendons in the Asymptomatic Shoulder Am. J. Sports Med., March 1, 1995; 23(2): 142 - 145. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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M. R. Green and K. P. Christensen Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Glenoid Labrum in Anterior Shoulder Instability Am. J. Sports Med., July 1, 1994; 22(4): 493 - 498. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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