Age dependent prevalence of the supraacetabular fossa in children, adolescents and young adults
Kurzfassung
|
OBJECTIVES
The supraacetabular fossa (SAF) is an anatomical variant of the
acetabular roof which may mimic a cartilage defect. Two different
subtypes have been described: type 1 fluid-filled and type 2
cartilage-filled. The adult prevalence of SAF was reported between
10.5 and 12.6%. We aimed to determine SAF prevalence in a pediatric
and young adult population and examine the potential remodeling of
the subtypes over time.
METHODS
A retrospective search of the institutional database for hip MRI of
participants aged 4-25 years was carried out between 2010 and
2020. A total of 401 eligible MRIs of 323 participants were analyzed
by two readers. The documented features were: existence of SAF,
definition of subtype and measurements of the SAF in three
dimensions. Logistic regression models were calculated to estimate
the influence of age on the presence of SAF.
RESULTS
Out of 323, 115 (35,6%) participants demonstrated a supraacetabular
fossa. 63 (19.5%) participants presented subtype 1 and 51 (15.8%)
type 2; one participant had both. The predicted probability for SAF
increases until the age of 14, beyond 14 years, the combined
predicted probability for both subtypes decreased again. In contrast
to SAF type 1, SAF type 2 was more prevalent with older age. The
size of the SAF decreased with aging.
CONCLUSION
The supraacetabular fossa is most frequent in adolescents. With
higher age, the prevalence and the size of the SAF decreased. This
data supports the theory that the SAF is a developmental variant.
|
|
|
Zitation
|
Väth D, Dietrich T, Wildermuth S, Leschka S, Wälti S, Graf N,
Fischer T. Age dependent prevalence of the supraacetabular fossa in
children, adolescents and young adults. Insights Imaging 2022;
13:91.
|
|
|
Typ
|
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review (Englisch)
|
Veröffentlichungsdatum
|
13-05-2022
|
Titel der Zeitschrift
|
Insights Imaging (13/1)
|
ISSN print
|
1869-4101
|
Seiten
|
91
|
PubMed
|
35551532
|
DOI
|
10.1186/s13244-022-01229-0
|
Weitere Links & Downloads