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Use of Multimodality Imaging in the Evaluation of Patients With Spondyloarthropathies and Sacroiliitis.

Curēus 2024 March
Spondyloarthropathy (SpA) is one of the most common causes of low back pain. It is caused by inflammatory arthritis in the spine, manifesting in various forms such as psoriatic arthritis (PsA), ankylosing spondylitis (AS), and sacroiliitis. A comprehensive systematic literature search was done to evaluate and compare MRI, CT, single-photon emission CT, PET, ultrasound (US) imaging, low-dose CT, and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) techniques in assessing SpAs. The search strategy was constructed by an analysis of key terms from relevant articles in MEDLINE ProQuest, Embase, and PubMed. The key terms used to search for these articles were "SpA," "sacroiliitis," "spondylitis," "psoriatic arthritis," "MRI," "CT scan," "x-ray," "magnetic resonance imaging," "computed tomography," "bone density," and "ultrasound." A total of 1,131 articles published in English between January 1, 2003, and October 15, 2023 were identified and screened for eligibility by members of the research team, which resulted in 69 total articles selected for the final review. US has played an important role in visualizing joint inflammation and enthesitis (inflammation of the enthesis), which are common features of PsA. Although MRI and CT are considered more reliable modalities for diagnosing active sacroiliitis, US imaging with Doppler flow can also be useful in conjunction with CT images to visualize abnormal blood flow in the sacroiliac joints, as well as other joints affected by inflammatory arthritis. MRI provides increased diagnostic confidence in the diagnosis of sacroiliitis in active AS patients when compared to CT. CT is more sensitive than plain radiographs. The PET activity score showed a good correlation in diagnosing inflammatory sacroiliitis but lacked in identifying structural lesions. CT has high diagnostic accuracy, but it exposes patients to a high radiation dose. MRI visualizes joint and tissue inflammation, bone, and bone marrow change and can identify peripheral inflammation in soft tissue and joints in patients diagnosed with PsA. MRI can also visualize bone marrow changes and subchondral edema, which can aid in the early diagnosis of ankylosing SpA and gauge disease severity. DWI and short-tau inversion recovery imaging are both MRI techniques used in detecting sacroiliitis. MRI and CT are shown to be reliable imaging modalities for the diagnosis of sacroiliitis; however, it was found that Doppler US played an accurate role in the diagnosis as well. MRI visualizes joints and tissue with the most precision, making it useful in evaluating patients with PsA, while PET CT is useful in the diagnosis of inflammatory sacroiliitis patients. There is limited literature available comparing the multiple modalities of imaging available for each SpA. The review's objective is to analyze imaging findings in patients diagnosed with sacroiliitis and SpAs. The findings in this literature review are valuable for properly assessing and diagnosing patients suffering from SpAs.

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