» Articles » PMID: 36006462

MRI-guided Sacroiliac Joint Injections in Children and Adults: Current Practice and Future Developments

Overview
Journal Skeletal Radiol
Specialties Orthopedics
Radiology
Date 2022 Aug 25
PMID 36006462
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Common etiologies of low back pain include degenerative arthrosis and inflammatory arthropathy of the sacroiliac joints. The diagnostic workup revolves around identifying and confirming the sacroiliac joints as a pain generator. Diagnostic sacroiliac joint injections often serve as functional additions to the diagnostic workup through eliciting a pain response that tests the hypothesis that the sacroiliac joints do or do not contribute to the patient's pain syndrome. Therapeutic sacroiliac joint injections aim to provide medium- to long-term relief of symptoms and reduce inflammatory activity and, ultimately, irreversible structural damage. Ultrasonography, fluoroscopy, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may be used to guide sacroiliac joint injections. The populations that may benefit most from MRI-guided sacroiliac joint procedures include children, adolescents, adults of childbearing age, and patients receiving serial injections due to the ability of interventional MRI to avoid radiation exposure. Most clinical wide-bore MRI systems can be used for MRI-guided sacroiliac joint injections. Turbo spin echo pulse sequences optimized for interventional needle display visualize the needle tip with an error margin of < 1 mm or less. Published success rates of intra-articular sacroiliac joint drug delivery with MRI guidance range between 87 and 100%. The time required for MR-guided sacroiliac joint injections in adults range between 23-35 min and 40 min in children. In this article, we describe techniques for MRI-guided sacroiliac joint injections, share our practice of incorporating interventional MRI in the care of patients with sacroiliac joint mediated pain, discuss the rationales, benefits, and limitations of interventional MRI, and conclude with future developments.

Citing Articles

Efficacy of Lateral View Needle Placement for Sacroiliac Joint Injections.

Johansen P, Nguyen A, Mohamed A, Mehta N, Pilitsis J, Westerhaus B J Pain Res. 2024; 17:553-558.

PMID: 38343656 PMC: 10859046. DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S431974.


Infectious sacroiliitis: MRI- and CT-based assessment of disease extent, complications, and anatomic correlation.

Interligator S, Bozec A, Cluzel G, Devilder M, Ghaouche J, Guenoun D Skeletal Radiol. 2023; 53(10):2247-2262.

PMID: 38110777 DOI: 10.1007/s00256-023-04535-w.


Association of anatomical variants of the sacroiliac joint with bone marrow edema in patients with axial spondyloarthritis.

Vereecke E, Jans L, Herregods N, Chen M, Jaremko J, Laloo F Skeletal Radiol. 2023; 53(3):507-514.

PMID: 37682337 DOI: 10.1007/s00256-023-04435-z.

References
1.
Fortin J, Dwyer A, West S, Pier J . Sacroiliac joint: pain referral maps upon applying a new injection/arthrography technique. Part I: Asymptomatic volunteers. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 1994; 19(13):1475-82. View

2.
Palsson T, Gibson W, Darlow B, Bunzli S, Lehman G, Rabey M . Changing the Narrative in Diagnosis and Management of Pain in the Sacroiliac Joint Area. Phys Ther. 2019; 99(11):1511-1519. DOI: 10.1093/ptj/pzz108. View

3.
Fritz J, Niemeyer T, Clasen S, Wiskirchen J, Tepe G, Kastler B . Management of chronic low back pain: rationales, principles, and targets of imaging-guided spinal injections. Radiographics. 2007; 27(6):1751-71. DOI: 10.1148/rg.276065509. View

4.
Dussault R, Kaplan P, Anderson M . Fluoroscopy-guided sacroiliac joint injections. Radiology. 2000; 214(1):273-7. DOI: 10.1148/radiology.214.1.r00ja28273. View

5.
Silbergleit R, Mehta B, Sanders W, Talati S . Imaging-guided injection techniques with fluoroscopy and CT for spinal pain management. Radiographics. 2001; 21(4):927-39; discussion 940-2. DOI: 10.1148/radiographics.21.4.g01jl15927. View