Article

Speckle tracking ultrasound for assessment of the relative motion of flexor tendon and subsynovial connective tissue in the human carpal tunnel.

Division of Orthopedic Research, Orthopedic Biomechanics Laboratory, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Ultrasound in medicine & biology (impact factor: 2.02). 10/2009; 35(12):1973-81. DOI:10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2009.07.004 pp.1973-81
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT The objective of this study was to compare tissue Doppler imaging and speckle tracking ultrasound to assess the relative motion of flexor tendon and surrounding subsynovial connective tissue (SSCT). Twenty normal human wrists were imaged with an ultrasound scanner. The two ultrasound methods measured the excursion and maximum velocity of the tendon and SSCT while subjects gripped three different sized acrylic tubes and these were correlated with tendon excursions estimated from finger joint angle changes. The maximum velocity ratio (=SSCT/tendon velocity) and the shear index (=[(Tendon excursion-SSCT excursion)/Tendon excursion]x100%) were calculated. The intraclass correlation coefficient was higher for joint angle/speckle tracking tendon excursion (0.642) than for joint angle/tissue Doppler excursion (0.377). The speckle tracking method could also discriminate differences in maximum velocity ratio and shear index for different tube sizes. We conclude that speckle tracking may be useful in assessing the relative motion of tendon and SSCT.

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Keywords

different tube sizes
 
finger joint angle changes
 
intraclass correlation coefficient
 
joint angle/speckle
 
joint angle/tissue Doppler excursion
 
maximum velocity
 
maximum velocity ratio
 
normal human wrists
 
relative motion
 
shear index
 
subsynovial connective tissue
 
tissue Doppler imaging
 
two ultrasound methods
 
ultrasound
 
ultrasound scanner
 

Yuichi Yoshii