Volume 1154, Issue 1 p. 35-40

Bone Marrow Edema

Georg Schett

Georg Schett

Department of Internal Medicine 3, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany

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First published: 18 February 2009
Citations: 42
Address for correspondence: Georg Schett, Department of Internal Medicine 3, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Krankenhausstrasse 12 Erlangen Germany 91080. [email protected]

Abstract

A bone marrow edema pattern on MRI has a similar signal quality as an inflamed synovium and may, in fact, reflect true inflammatory infiltrates rather than a pure accumulation of extracellular fluid. Bone lesions near sites of rheumatoid arthritis–related inflammation are heavily vascularized, contributing to the high water content and enhanced visibility on MRI. However, even without erosive change, periarticular bone marrow lesions may be seen. This chapter describes the nature of bone marrow lesions detected by MRI in patients with inflammatory arthritis.