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Journal ArticleDOI

High-Frequency Ultrasonographic Examination of the Finger Pulley System

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TLDR
The purpose of this study was to determine the ability of high‐frequency ultrasonography to provide for direct evaluation of the annular and cruciform finger pulley system.
Abstract
Objective. The purpose of this study was to determine the ability of high-frequency ultrasonography to provide for direct evaluation of the annular and cruciform finger pulley system. Methods. In the first part of the work, a cadaveric study was performed to outline the normal anatomy of the annular and cruciform finger pulley system. Eighteen cadaveric hands were cut (n = 10) or dissected (n = 8). Two musculoskeletal radiologists retrospectively reviewed in consensus the photographs of anatomic sections and dissections. This cadaveric study gave the 2 readers the opportunity to learn the normal anatomy of the finger pulley system. In the second part of the work, the annular and cruciform finger pulley system of 20 hands of volunteers was evaluated by ultrasonography with a 17-MHz linear transducer. Images were retrospectively analyzed by means of consensus of the 2 radiologists with respect to the visibility of each finger pulley. Results. For annular (A) pulleys, high-frequency ultrasonography showed A1, A2, A3, and A4 in 100%, 100%, 65%, and 100% of cases, respectively. For cruciform (C) pulleys, high-frequency ultrasonography showed only C1 in 45% of cases. Direct visualization of A5, C2, and C3 was not possible. Conclusions. High-frequency ultrasonography allows excellent depiction of finger pulleys except for annular pulley A5 and cruciform pulleys C2 and

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Diagnostic and interventional musculoskeletal ultrasound: part 2. Clinical applications.

Jay Smith, +1 more
- 01 Feb 2009 - 
TL;DR: Doctors should be able to list the advantages and disadvantages of ultrasound compared to other available imaging modalities and describe how ultrasound machines produce images using sound waves to identify multiple applications for diagnostic and interventional musculoskeletal ultrasound.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sonographic Appearance of Trigger Fingers

TL;DR: Thickening and hyper‐vascularization of the A1 pulley are the hallmarks of trigger fingers on sonography, and other frequently observed features include distal flexor tendinosis and tenosynovitis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Musculoskeletal Sonography: A Dynamic Tool for Usual and Unusual Disorders

TL;DR: Dynamic sonography is a useful tool for the evaluation of a variety of musculoskeletal disorders that cannot be diagnosed by any other imaging method.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sonographic appearance of the flexor tendon, volar plate, and A1 pulley with respect to the severity of trigger finger.

TL;DR: The flexor tendon and A1 pulley thickened significantly only after patients exhibited triggering except in the thumb, and thickening of the volar plate appears to have an important role in continuous triggering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sonographically guided percutaneous first annular pulley release: cadaveric safety study of needle and knife techniques.

TL;DR: Sonographically guided percutaneous A1 pulley releases can be performed safely using previously described needle and hook knife techniques, and the safety margin for thumb releases is less than that for finger releases, particularly with respect to the radial digital nerve.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pathobiology of the human A1 pulley in trigger finger.

TL;DR: The underlying pathobiological mechanism for triggering at the A1 pulley is characterized by a fibrocartilage metaplasia, which is distinguished by the number of chondrocytes and adjacent extracellular matrix in trigger digits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Finger Pulley Injuries in Extreme Rock Climbers: Depiction with Dynamic US

TL;DR: The sensitivity of US for depiction of finger pulley injuries was 98%, and specificity was 100%.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pulley System in the Fingers: Normal Anatomy and Simulated Lesions in Cadavers at MR Imaging, CT, and US with and without Contrast Material Distention of the Tendon Sheath

TL;DR: MR imaging and US provide means of direct finger pulley system evaluation and define criteria to diagnose pulley abnormalities with different imaging modalities.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-frequency ultrasound examination of the wrist and hand

TL;DR: High-frequency ultrasound is an efficient, rapid and inexpensive altenative to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for investigation of diseases in the soft tissues of the wrist and hand and allows detection of foreign bodies and the reliable identification of a variety of traumatic lesions affecting tendons, annular pulleys, ligaments, vessels and nerves.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sonographic evaluation of digital annular pulley tears

TL;DR: US can diagnose DAP tears and correlates with the MRI and surgical data and is suggested as the first imaging modality in the evaluation of injuries of the digital pulley because of its low cost and non-invasiveness.
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