Articular cartilage of synovial joints is not visible with conventional X-ray imaging. Hence, the gradual degeneration and destruction of articular cartilage, which is characteristic of degenerative joint diseases, is only detected at a late stage when the cartilage is lost and the joint space that it once occupied narrows. The development of an X-ray imaging technique that could detect both the degenerative cartilage and bone features of joint diseases is of special interest. Here we show, for the first time, that a high-contrast imaging technique, diffraction-enhanced X-ray imaging (DEI), allows the visualization of articular cartilage of both disarticulated and articulated rabbit knee joints. Furthermore, a single cartilage lesion can be visualized within an intact joint. The results suggest that DEI has the potential to be of use in the study of cartilage degeneration. © 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Muehleman, C., Chapman, L. D., Kuettner, K. E., Rieff, J., Mollenhauer, J. A., Massuda, K., & Zhong, Z. (2003). Radiography of rabbit articular cartilage with diffraction-enhanced imaging. Anatomical Record - Part A Discoveries in Molecular, Cellular, and Evolutionary Biology, 272(1), 392–397. https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.a.10043
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