MRI findings of arachnoiditis, revisited. Is classification possible? Journal Article


Authors: El Homsi, M.; Gharzeddine, K.; Cuevas, J.; Arevalo-Perez, J.; Rebeiz, K.; Khoury, N. J.; Moukaddam, H.
Article Title: MRI findings of arachnoiditis, revisited. Is classification possible?
Abstract: Background: Prior imaging studies characterizing lumbar arachnoiditis have been based on small sample numbers and have reported inconsistent results. Purpose: To review the different imaging patterns of lumbosacral arachnoiditis, their significance, and clinical implications. Study type: Retrospective. Population: A total of 96 patients (43 women; average age 61.3 years) with imaging findings of arachnoiditis (postsurgical: N = 49; degenerative: N = 29; vertebral fracture: N = 6; epidural and subdural hemorrhage: N = 3, infectious: N= 1; other: N = 8) from January 2009 to April 2018. Field strength/Sequence: Sagittal and axial T2-weighted Turbo Spin Echo at 1.5 T and 3 T. Assessment: Chart review was performed to assess the cause of arachnoiditis, and imaging was reviewed by two musculoskeletal and three neurology radiologists, blinded to the clinical data and to each other's imaging interpretation. Previous classification included a three-group system based on the appearance of the nerve roots on T2-weighted images. A fourth group was added in our review as “nonspecified” and was proposed for indeterminate imaging findings that did not fall into the classical groups. The presence/absence of synechiae/fibrous bands that distort the nerve roots and of spinal canal stenosis was also assessed. Statistical tests: The kappa score was used to assess agreement between readers for both classification type and presence/absence of synechiae. Results: Postsurgical (51%) and degenerative changes (30%) were the most common etiologies. About 7%–55% of arachnoiditis were classified as group 4. There was very poor classification agreement between readers (kappa score 0.051). There was also poor interreader agreement for determining the presence of synechiae (kappa 0.18) with, however, strong interreader agreement for the presence of synechia obtained between the most experienced readers (kappa 0.89). Data Conclusion: This study demonstrated the lack of consensus and clarity in the classification system of lumbar arachnoiditis. The presence of synechia has high interreader agreement only among most experienced readers and promises to be a useful tool in assessing arachnoiditis. Evidence Level: 3. Technical Efficacy: Stage 2. © 2021 International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
Keywords: adult; major clinical study; postoperative period; disease classification; infection; classification; evidence based practice; medical record review; retrospective study; scoring system; mri; subdural hematoma; lumbar; arachnoiditis; degeneration; spine fracture; human; male; female; article; nerve root; vertebral canal stenosis
Journal Title: Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Volume: 54
Issue: 3
ISSN: 1053-1807
Publisher: Wiley Blackwell  
Date Published: 2021-09-01
Start Page: 904
End Page: 909
Language: English
DOI: 10.1002/jmri.27583
PUBMED: 33644967
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 September 2021 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Karim Jean Rebeiz
    11 Rebeiz