Loading…

Ultrasonography of Knee Joint in Hemophilia A: What the Eyes Cannot See

Haemophilia is the most common inherited coagulopathy. Approximately 94% patients suffer from joint disability. An imaging modality to detect joint damage can help in monitoring. Ultrasonography (USG) provides a low cost and reliable imaging alternative to magnetic resonance imaging. This study aims...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Indian journal of hematology & blood transfusion 2019-01, Vol.35 (1), p.149-154
Main Authors: Nag, Arijit, Ghosh, Shounak, Sinha, Debanjali, Mondal, Sumantro, Roy, Siddhartha Shankar, Ghosh, Alakendu, Bhattacharyya, Maitreyyee
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Haemophilia is the most common inherited coagulopathy. Approximately 94% patients suffer from joint disability. An imaging modality to detect joint damage can help in monitoring. Ultrasonography (USG) provides a low cost and reliable imaging alternative to magnetic resonance imaging. This study aims at the detection of subclinical knee-joint involvement by USG, in patients with moderate to severe Haemophilia. 27 patients suffering from moderate and severe Haemophilia and 27 age-matched controls were studied. USG of bilateral knee joints was done to analyse cartilage and synovial thickness, synovial vascularity and resistive index of vascular flow along with synovial collection. The relevant clinical parameters (age at diagnosis and study enrolment, severity of haemophilia A, annualized bleeding rates, total number of joint bleeds, spontaneous and provoked bleed, number of episodes treated with factor VIII injection) were noted. The USG findings were correlated to the clinical parameters and subclinical joint bleed detection looked for. 13 patients [18 out of 54 joints (33.33%)] showed increased vascular signals with mean resistive-index (RI) 0.67 (± 0.086; 95% CI: 0.62–0.70). The mean synovial thickness in persons with haemophilia (PwH) was higher than the control subset ( p 
ISSN:0971-4502
0974-0449
0974-0449
0971-4502
DOI:10.1007/s12288-018-0974-5