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Prevalence and Patterns of Occult Hip Fractures and Mimics Revealed by MRI

Mayumi Oka1,2 and Johnny U. V. Monu1

1 Department of Radiology, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Rochester Medical Center, 601 Elmwood Ave., Box 648, Rochester, NY 14642.
2 Present address: Department of Radiology, Johns Hopkins Hospital, 600 N Wolfe St., Baltimore, MD 21287.



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Fig. 1A. 77-year-old woman with fracture of greater trochanter after fall. Fracture was difficult to visualize on conventional radiographs. Frontal radiograph of left hip appears to show normal findings.

 


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Fig. 1B. 77-year-old woman with fracture of greater trochanter after fall. Fracture was difficult to visualize on conventional radiographs. T1-weighted coronal image of left hip shows linear low-signal focus (arrowheads), indicating fracture.

 


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Fig. 2A. 67-year-old woman who presented with persistent right hip pain after fall 3 weeks earlier. Frontal radiograph of right hip shows unremarkable findings.

 


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Fig. 2B. 67-year-old woman who presented with persistent right hip pain after fall 3 weeks earlier. Coronal T2-weighted image shows abnormally high signal in anterior column of hip and in area of superior pubic ramus, consistent with trabecular fracture. Linear abnormally high signal is seen in adductors and obturator externus and is compatible with presence of interstitial edema or hemorrhage.

 


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Fig. 3A. 73-year-old man who experienced hip pain after fall. He had no fractures, but MRI showed muscle injury. T1-weighted coronal image shows abnormal signal of interstitial muscle hemorrhage (arrows) in obturator externus muscle near its attachment to greater trochanter and in musculotendinous junction.

 


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Fig. 3B. 73-year-old man who experienced hip pain after fall. He had no fractures, but MRI showed muscle injury. T2-weighted coronal image shows abnormal signal in obturator externus muscle near its attachment to greater trochanter and in musculotendinous junction. These findings are compatible with interstitial hemorrhage (arrows).

 


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Fig. 4A. 81-year-old woman with abscess in iliopsoas muscle who presented with left hip pain, no history of trauma, and clinical suspicion of occult fracture. T1-weighted axial image shows rounded low-signal focus (arrow) adjacent to left iliacus muscle.

 


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Fig. 4B. 81-year-old woman with abscess in iliopsoas muscle who presented with left hip pain, no history of trauma, and clinical suspicion of occult fracture. T2-weighted image shows central area of high signal surrounded by concentric focus of low- and high-signal zones, consistent with abscess (solid arrow). Abnormally high signal in iliacus muscle (open arrows) is result of muscle inflammation.

 


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Fig. 5. 74-year-old woman with iliopsoas avulsion injury after fall 2 days before MRI examination. T2-weighted axial fast spin-echo fat-suppressed image shows abnormally high signal (arrows) in and surrounding iliopsoas muscle, which is consistent with partial tear of muscle and surrounding hemorrhage. Note also some abnormal signal around gluteus minimus muscle (asterisks).

 

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