Reporting Ultrasound Findings and Diagnosis

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Reporting Ultrasound Findings and Diagnosis Rodina Nestorova MD Rheumatology Centre St. Irina, Sofia Bulgarian MSUS Society Basic MSU Course 14-16 Jan 2016 Plovdiv, Bulgaria

ULTRASOUND REPORT COLLECTION DESCRIPTION RECORDING INTERPRETATION

US REPORT GENERAL COMMENTS The ultrasound report should be written and issued by the sonographer undertaking the ultrasound examination and viewed as an integral part of the whole examination

MSUS report Steps Before US examination During US examination After US examination

Before US examination А clinical history should be taken prior to any examination Clinical question or motivation to be addressed should be indicated at the beginning of the report Bene diagnoscitur, bene curatur. Well diagnosed, well cured.

. 1.For a patient with articular pain, swelling, or mechanical symptoms, without definitive diagnosis on clinical examination, it is reasonable to use MSUS to further elucidate the diagnosis at the following joints: glenohumeral, acromioclavicular, sternoclavicular, elbow, wrist, metacarpophalangeal, interphalangeal, hip, knee, ankle, midfoot, and metatarsophalangeal. However, performing MSUS at the TMJ and costochondral joints will not add to the clinical assessment. 2. For a patient with mono- or oligoarthralgia, current or historical, without definitive diagnosis on clinical examination, it is reasonable to use MSUS to evaluate for evidence of subclinical inflammatory arthritis or enthesitis at the following asymptomatic joints or regions: glenohumeral, acromioclavicular, sternoclavicular, elbow, wrist, metacarpophalangeal, interphalangeal, hip, knee, ankle, midfoot, and Metatarsophalangeal. 3. For a patient with diagnosed inflammatory arthritis and new or ongoing symptoms without definitive diagnosis on clinical examination, it is reasonable to use MSUS to evaluate for inflammatory disease activity, structural damage, or emergence of an alternate cause at the following sites: glenohumeral, acromioclavicular, elbow, wrist, metacarpophalangeal, interphalangeal, hip, knee, ankle, midfoot and metatarsophalangeal, and entheseal. 4. For a patient with pain or mechanical symptoms of the hip region without definitive diagnosis on clinical examination, it is reasonable to use MSUS to evaluate effusion, intraarticular and periarticular lesions, and adjacent regional soft tissue structures. 5. For a patient with periarticular pain without definitive diagnosis on clinical examination, it is reasonable to use MSUS to evaluate tendon and soft tissue pathologies and the nature and localization of adjacent swelling at the shoulder, elbow, hand, hip, knee, ankle, and forefoot. 7. For a patient with shoulder pain or mechanical symptoms, without definitive diagnosis on clinical examination, it is reasonable to use MSUS to evaluate underlying structural disorders, but not for adhesive capsulitis or as preparation for surgical intervention. 8. For a patient with regional mechanical symptoms, without definitive diagnosis on clinical examination, it is reasonable to use MSUS to evaluate for inflammation, tendon, and soft tissue pathologies at the regions: shoulder, elbow, hand, wrist, hip, knee, ankle, and foot. 9. It is reasonable to use MSUS to evaluate the parotid and submandibular glands in a patient being evaluated for Sjogren s disease to determine whether they have typical changes. 10. For a patient with symptoms in the region of a joint whose evaluation is obfuscated by adipose or other local derangements of soft tissue, it is reasonable to use MSUS to facilitate clinical assessment at the glenohumeral, acromioclavicular, elbow, wrist, hand, metacarpophalangeal, interphalangeal, hip, knee, ankle/foot, and metatarsophalangeal joints. 11. For a patient with regional neuropathic pain without definitive diagnosis on clinical examination, it is reasonable to use MSUS to diagnose entrapment of the median nerve at the carpal tunnel, the ulnar nerve at the cubital tunnel, and the posterior tibial nerve at the tarsal tunnel. 12. It is reasonable to use MSUS to guide articular and periarticular aspiration or injection at sites that include the synovial, tenosynovial, bursal, peritendinous, and perientheseal areas. 13. Use of MSUS may be reasonable for guidance during synovial biopsy procedures. 14. It is reasonable to use MSUS to monitor disease activity and structural progression at the glenohumeral, acromioclavicular, elbow, wrist, hand, metacarpophalangeal, interphalangeal, hip, ACR Report on Reasonable Use of MSUS in Rheumatology Practice knee, 2012ankle, foot, and metatarsophalangeal sites in patients with

During US examination 3. Interpretation of US findings, US diagnosis and conclusions 2. Description of US findings (terminology) 1. Examination method

During US examination 1. Examination method Equipment US mode List of anatomic areas examined Scanning technique Scanning Guidelines followed /EULAR/

During US examination 1. Examination method For each position and structure: Patient position Probe placement Bony landmarks Sonographic image Naredo E, Joint ultrasonography. Sonoanatomy and examination technique. 2007, Euromedice

During US examination 2. Detailed description of US findings: checklist Echogenicity Hyperechoic Hypoechoic Anechoic Location Related to: skin, bones, adjacent anatomical structures Shape & Contour Well defined or not Regular, irregular

During US examination 2. Detailed description of US findings: checklist Internal echotexture Homogeneous Heterogeneous Reaction to compression Displaceable Non Doppler signal Presence or not Inside/Around

During US examination 2. Detailed description of US findings: checklist Artifacts Posterior acoustic shadowing Posterior acoustic enhancement

During US examination 2. Detailed description of US findings: checklist Quantification /measurement/ Semiquantitative scale Quantitative scale

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings International standardised terminology and definitions The J. Rheumatology 2005;32(12):2485-7

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings RA Bone Erosion Synovial Fluid Synovial Hypertrophy An intraarticular discontinuity of the bone surface that is visible in 2 perpendicular planes Abnormal hypoechoic or anechoic (relative to subdermal fat, but sometimes may be isoechoic or hyperechoic) intraarticular material that is displaceable and compressible, but does not exhibit Doppler signal Abnormal hypoechoic (relative to subdermal fat, but sometimes may be isoechoic or hyperechoic) intraarticular tissue that is nondisplaceable and poorly compressible and which may exhibit Doppler signal The J. Rheumatology 2005;32(12):2485-7

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings Tenosynovitis Hypoechoic or anechoic thickened tissue with or without fluid within the tendon sheath, which is seen in 2 perpendicular planes and which may exhibit Doppler signal. The J. Rheumatology 2005;32(12):2485-7

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings Enthesitis Abnormally hypoechoic (loss of normal fibrillar architecture) and/or thickened tendon or ligament at its bony attachment (may occasionally contain hyperechoic foci consistent with calcification), seen in two perpendicular planes that may exhibit Doppler signal and/or bony changes, including enthesophytes, erosions, or irregularity. The J. Rheumatology 2005;32(12):2485-7

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings Tenosynovitis on B-mode Tenosynovitis on Doppler mode Abnormal anechoic and/or hypoechoic (relative to tendon fibers) tendon sheath widening which can be related both to the presence of tenosynovial abnormal fluid and/or hypertrophy Presence of peri-tendinous Doppler signal within the synovial sheath, seen in two perpendicular planes, excluding normal nutrient vessels in mesotenon or vinculae, only if the tendon shows peri-tendinous synovial sheath widening on B-mode

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings Tendinosis Focal or global thickening and hypoechogenicity of the tendon with abnormal heterogeneous echotexture (hypoechoic areas) which may exhibit a hypervascular pattern at CD/PD (neovascularization)

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings Paratenonitis Abnormal hypoechoic halo (transverse) or line (longitudinal) surrounding a tendon without synovial sheath (and contour irregularities)

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings Tendon tear Old complete tear Partial or fullthickness tendon defect/ interruption of the tendon fibres An absence of the tendon at its anatomic location

During examination Some examples

SSP Hum. head How to describe the SSP tendon? Normal: the supraspinatus tendon shows normal shape and internal echotexture OR Abnormal: the supraspinatus tendon shows a hypoechoic defect.

Additional pathology in this case?

How to describe the Peronei tendons? Normal: the peronei tendons show normal shape and internal echotexture OR Abnormal: the peronei tendons show a hypoechoic thickened tissue within the tendon sheath with or without fluid, visible in 2 perpendicular planes (may exhibit Doppler signal)

Any limitations for the examination should be stated and the reason indicated Eg During examination Description of all examined structures (i.e. normal or abnormal) should appear in the report The thick subcutaneous tissue of the patient prevented the examination of the anterior recess of the hip (transducer frequency 10-15 MHz) The impossibility of shoulder internal rotation and adduction prevented complete visualization of the supraspinatus tendon

During examination Description of all examined structures (i.e. normal or abnormal) should appear in the report Anatomic structures that cannot be properly or entirely visualized (e.g. knee menisci, wrist triangular fibricartilage, ) should not be reported as normal If present, pathological findings should be reported

How to describe the Medial meniscus? Normal: the outer part of medial meniscus shows normal shape and internal echotexture OR Abnormal: hypoechoic defect in the peripheral aspect of the medial meniscus

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings Quantification/Measurement Semiquantitative Quantitative

During examination Scoring the degree of pathology Effusion/synovial hypertrophy Doppler signal Bone erosions Nerve thickness Tendon and muscle tears When a follow up is planned

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings Quantification/Measurement Quantitative A quantitative measure of the lesion can be provided, accompanied by the normal values according to the literature and the clinical relevance of the measure, if applicable Qvistgaard ARD 2001, Terslev Acta Rad 2003, Versaminidis Med Biol 2005

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings Quantification/Measurement Quantitative A numeric measure is not strictly necessary in many MSUS examinations High anatomical variability! Quantitative measurement is recommended/mandatory: tendon tears, muscle ruptures, nerve thickness, cortical erosions Sometimes quantitative measures are useless for diagnosis but may be useful for monitoring

How to describe the Median nerve? Normal: the Median nerve shows normal cross section and internal echotexture OR Abnormal: the Median nerve shows abnormal cross section and internal echotexture

During examination 2. Detailed description of US findings Quantification/Measurement Semiquantitative A semiquantitative grading of the pathological findings can be provided, if applicable and described in the literature Szkudlarek A&R 2001

A semiquantitative score for Doppler synovitis OMERACT: semiquantitative score 0-3 Newman, Szkudlarek, Filippucci, Naredo, Iagnocco, Brown

A semiquantitative score for Doppler tenosynovitis Grade 0 Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 Naredo E, et al. Reliability of a consensus based US score for tenosynovitis in RA. Ann Rheum Dis. 2013;72(8):1328-34

Bone erosions Long Trans Very small < 1 mm Small 1-2 mm, Moderate 2 4 mm Large >4 mm Always evaluate all the bone surface available, not only with standardized scans The J. Rheumatology 2005;32(12):2485-7

3. Interpretation of US findings, US diagnosis and conclusions Do not make ambiguous US diagnosis. If you are unsure of the diagnosis: Be honest and accept this Ask a colleague for opinion/help Explain patient-, disease- or machinedependent limitations Suggest alternative diagnostic methods

3. Interpretation of US findings, US diagnosis and conclusions Some examples

3. Interpretation of US findings, US diagnosis and conclusions 42 yrs old male; Pain, swelling, (no redness) in the posterior elbow/right/. US examination, Diagnosis, Therapy?

3. Interpretation of US findings, US diagnosis and conclusions 55 yrs old female; Pain, stiffness, swelling in some small joints of the hands. US examination, Diagnosis, Therapy? Long III PIP Long V PIP MCP II Long II PIP

3. Interpretation of US findings, US diagnosis and conclusions 55 yrs old female; Pain, stiffness, swelling in some small joints of the hands. US examination, Diagnosis, Therapy? Long Long

3. Interpretation of US findings, US diagnosis and conclusions 34 yrs old female; 15 months history of RA. MTX during the last 6 months (20 mg weekly) US, NewTherapy?

Long Long

II MCP R Long II MCP L Long

Long MSUS is my tool to make a decision! IV PIP Long I PIP Long

Third step Write the report! The responsibility for the accuracy of the report is yours!

US REPORT All images should have the following information correctly recorded on them Obligatory data 1. Patient identification 2. Date of examination 3. Hospital/department identification 4. The name and status of the sonographer issuing the report

US REPORT GENERAL COMMENTS Write the report as soon as possible after the examination Overwrite in all documented US images: 1. The anatomic area 2. The scan (transverse, longitudinal, oblique) 3. The name of the visible bones

US REPORT Documentation and Image recording Таке a proper number of scans with normal and pathological findings (jpeg images, videoclips) Store images as: * printed images, * on a tape or * electronic medium

US REPORT Documentation and Image recording All written reports and recorded images of ultrasound studies keep in the patient's record Take every opportunity to maintain and develop your knowledge, skills and competence

Conclusions Use standardized terminology and Take images of definitions Show of well correctly scanned pathology documented HELP images structures THE CLINICIAN and TO DIAGNOSE make very AND accurate TAKE THERAPEUTIC reports DECISIONS!

NEVER FORGET Your report is a teaching YOUR tool REPORT for yоunger IS YOUR BUSNESS sonographers! CARD!

Acknowledgement The author wishes to acknowledge the contribution of Esperanza Naredo, Nemanja Damjanov and Hilde Berner Hammer in this presentation.