Interdisciplinary consensus statements on imaging of DRUJ instability and TFCC injuries.
Luis CerezalFrancisco Del PiñalAndrea AtzeiRainer SchmittFabio BecceMaciej KlichMaciej BieńMilko C de JongeJames TehRobert Downey BoutinAndoni Paul TomsPatrick OmoumiJan FritzAlberto BazzocchiMaryam ShahabpourMarco ZanettiEva LlopisAlain BlumRadhesh Krishna LalamSutter RetoP Diana AfonsoVasco V MascarenhasAnne CottenJean-Luc DrapéGuillaume BierryGrzegorz PracońDanoob DaliliMarc MespreuveMarc Garcia-EliasGregory Ian BainChristophe L MathoulinLuc Van OverstraetenRobert M SzaboEmmanuel J CamusRiccardo LuchettiAdrian Julian ChojnowskiJoerg G GruenertPiotr CzarneckiFernando CorellaLadislav NagyMichiro YamamotoIgor O GolubevJörg van SchoonhovenFlorian GoehtzIwona Sudoł-SzopińskaTobias Johannes DietrichPublished in: European radiology (2023)
• Conventional radiography should be the initial imaging technique in the assessment of DRUJ instability. CT with static axial slices in neutral rotation, pronation, and supination is the most accurate method for evaluating DRUJ instability. • MRI is the most useful technique in diagnosing soft-tissue injuries causing DRUJ instability, especially TFCC lesions. • The main indications for MR arthrography and CT arthrography are foveal lesions of the TFCC.