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Dive into the research topics where Ben K. Graf is active.

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Featured researches published by Ben K. Graf.


Skeletal Radiology | 1996

Reassessment of the MR criteria for stability of osteochondritis dissecans in the knee and ankle

Arthur A. De Smet; Omer A. Ilahi; Ben K. Graf

Abstract Objective. T2-weighted MR images has been reported to be an accurate method for assessing osteochondritis dissecans. We reviewed our MR experience to confirm the accuracy of the published criteria of instability. We also assessed the value of each of four MR signs of instability. Design. We reviewed the original MR interpretations, arthroscopic reports, and MR examinations of 40 patients with osteochondritis dissecans of the talar dome or femoral condyles. Arthroscopy was used as the gold standard for stability. The MR examinations were reviewed retrospectively for a high-signal-intensity line or cystic area beneath the lesion, a high-signal-intensity line through the articular cartilage, or a focal articular defect. Patients. All patients who had undergone MR imaging for osteochondritis dissecans from 1990 to 1993 were reviewed. Forty patients were identified who had arthroscopy after the MR examination. There were 30 male and 10 female patients with an average age of 25.7 years. Thirty-one lesions were in a femoral condyle and nine were in the talar dome. Results and conclusions. The original MR interpretations correctly identified 35 of the 36 unstable lesions and all 4 stable lesions, giving a sensitivity of 0.97 and specificity of 1.0. There was a 98% agreement between the original and retrospective diagnoses. A high-signal-intensity line was seen beneath 72% of the 36 unstable lesions. The other three signs were noted in 22–31% of the unstable lesions. Fifty-six percent of the unstable lesions showed only one sign of instability. MR imaging is a highly sensitive method for detection of unstable osteochondritis dissecans. The presence of any one sign indicates instability, the most frequent sign being an underlying high-signal-intensity line. Because we examined only four stable lesions, our 95% confidence interval of 0.40–1.0 for a specificity of 1.0 gives only a limited estimate of the specificity of MR.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1995

Treatment of Osteitis Pubis in Athletes Results of Corticosteroid Injections

Mark A. Holt; James S. Keene; Ben K. Graf; Dennis Helwig

This study presents the results of treatment of osteitis pubis in 12 intercollegiate athletes. Early in this series, athletes were treated with prolonged rest, oral antiin flammatory medications, and hip-stretching exercises. Of the nine athletes treated in this manner, only one resumed symptom-free activity after 16 weeks of therapy; eight remained symptomatic and subsequently received a corticosteroid injection (1 ml 1% lidocaine, 1 ml 0.25% bupivacaine, and 4 mg dexamethasone) into the pubic symphysis. Of these eight athletes, three returned to full participation within 3 weeks of injection, four required a second injection to alleviate their symp toms, and one was unable to resume athletic activities despite two injections and an inguinal herniorrhaphy. In recent years, we have recommended an injection if there is no reduction in symptoms after 7 to 10 days of treatment. Three athletes received a corticosteroid in jection when their symptoms did not resolve. All three returned to full athletic competition within 2 weeks of the injection. The results of our study suggest that a more rapid return to intercollegiate athletics can be achieved through the judicious use of corticosteroid injections.


Skeletal Radiology | 1997

Untreated osteochondritis dissecans of the femoral condyles : prediction of patient outcome using radiographic and MR findings

Arthur A. De Smet; Omer A. Ilahi; Ben K. Graf

Abstract Objective. We investigated the usefulness of plain film and MR findings in predicting the outcome of conservatively treated patients with femoral osteochondritis dissecans. Design. Without knowledge of the clinical outcome, we retrospectively reviewed the initial plain films and MR examinations. Each MR examination was evaluated for the four MR findings of instability. Patients. Fourteen patients were studied in whom osteochondritis dissecans of a femoral condyle had been treated conservatively for periods ranging from 1.2 to 8.5 years. Results and conclusion. Three of five patients with an open femoral growth plate and one of nine patients with a closed growth plate had a good clinical outcome. Both patients with lesions smaller than 160 mm2 in area had a good outcome and ten of 12 patients with larger lesions had a poor outcome. Both patients with stable lesions by MR imaging had a good outcome while ten of 12 patients with a lesion unstable by MR imaging had poor outcomes. All six patients with a cartilage fracture or articular defect had poor outcomes. The results of this study should be considered preliminary since only 14 patients were followed. However, it appears that a good clinical outcome is likely when the femoral growth plate is open, when the osteochondritis dissecans is small, and when the lesion is stable by MR imaging. When a cartilage fracture or articular defect is found on MR imaging, the patient is likely to have a poor outcome.


Radiology | 2008

Juvenile versus Adult Osteochondritis Dissecans of the Knee: Appropriate MR Imaging Criteria for Instability

Richard Kijowski; Donna G. Blankenbaker; Kazuhiko Shinki; Jason P. Fine; Ben K. Graf; Arthur A. De Smet

PURPOSE To retrospectively compare the sensitivity and specificity of previously described magnetic resonance (MR) imaging criteria for the detection of instability in patients with juvenile or adult osteochondritis dissecans (OCD) of the knee, with arthroscopic findings as the reference standard. MATERIALS AND METHODS Informed consent was waived by the Institutional Review Board for this HIPAA-compliant study. The study group consisted of 32 skeletally immature patients (25 boys, seven girls; mean age, 14.4 years) with 36 juvenile OCD lesions of the knee and 33 skeletally mature patients (25 men, eight women; mean age, 26.2 years) with 34 adult OCD lesions of the knee. All patients had been evaluated with MR imaging and arthroscopy. MR studies were retrospectively reviewed by two radiologists in consensus to determine the presence of previously described MR imaging criteria for OCD instability (ie, high T2 signal intensity rim, surrounding cysts, high T2 signal intensity cartilage fracture line, and fluid-filled osteochondral defect). Sensitivity and specificity of the criteria were calculated separately for juvenile and adult OCD lesions. RESULTS Separately, previously described MR imaging criteria for detection of OCD instability were 0%-88% sensitive and 21%-100% specific for juvenile OCD lesions and 27%-54% sensitive and 100% specific for adult OCD lesions. When used together, the criteria were 100% sensitive and 11% specific for instability in juvenile OCD lesions and 100% sensitive and 100% specific for instability in adult OCD lesions. CONCLUSION Previously described MR imaging criteria for OCD instability have high specificity for adult but not juvenile lesions of the knee.


Arthroscopy | 1994

Effect of preconditioning on the viscoelastic response of primate patellar tendon

Ben K. Graf; Ray Vanderby; Mark J. Ulm; Roger P. Rogalski; Robert J. Thielke

Current techniques for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction with patellar tendon (PT) allow a measurable tension to be applied to the graft at the time of fixation. The viscoelastic nature of the PT, however, ensures that relaxation will cause the graft tension to decrease over time. To better understand this process, a primate model was used to evaluate acute viscoelastic relaxation in the PT. Thirty-five patella-patellar tendon-tibia (P-PT-T) complexes were harvested from normal primate knees (Cynomolgus monkeys), and were divided into five groups for mechanical comparison. Specimens were subjected to two 10-min relaxation tests separated by a 1-30-min unloaded interval. The first test provided baseline relaxation data as well as serving as preconditioning for the second test. Results indicate that preconditioning significantly reduces the tension lost in a graft due to viscoelastic relaxation. The effect of preconditioning is reduced with increasing recovery time (the time between preconditioning and the second relaxation test), but the effect is still significant after 30 min of unloading. No differences were observed in the relaxation behavior of specimens that were cyclicly or isometrically preconditioned, nor were differences observed between irradiated and nonirradiated specimens. These results suggest that preconditioning can reduce acute tension loss in a graft due to viscoelastic relaxation and that simple isometric preconditioning is just as effective as cyclic stretching.


Radiology | 2013

Evaluation of the Articular Cartilage of the Knee Joint: Value of Adding a T2 Mapping Sequence to a Routine MR Imaging Protocol

Richard Kijowski; Donna G. Blankenbaker; Alejandro Munoz del Rio; Geoffrey S. Baer; Ben K. Graf

PURPOSE To determine whether the addition of a T2 mapping sequence to a routine magnetic resonance (MR) imaging protocol could improve diagnostic performance in the detection of surgically confirmed cartilage lesions within the knee joint at 3.0 T. MATERIALS AND METHODS This prospective study was approved by the institutional review board, and the requirement to obtain informed consent was waived. The study group consisted of 150 patients (76 male and 74 female patients with an average age of 41.2 and 41.5 years, respectively) who underwent MR imaging and arthroscopy of the knee joint. MR imaging was performed at 3.0 T by using a routine protocol with the addition of a sagittal T2 mapping sequence. Images from all MR examinations were reviewed in consensus by two radiologists before surgery to determine the presence or absence of cartilage lesions on each articular surface, first by using the routine MR protocol alone and then by using the routine MR protocol with T2 maps. Each articular surface was then evaluated at arthroscopy. Generalized estimating equation models were used to compare the sensitivity and specificity of the routine MR imaging protocol with and without T2 maps in the detection of surgically confirmed cartilage lesions. RESULTS The sensitivity and specificity in the detection of 351 cartilage lesions were 74.6% and 97.8%, respectively, for the routine MR protocol alone and 88.9% and 93.1% for the routine MR protocol with T2 maps. Differences in sensitivity and specificity were statistically significant (P < .001). The addition of T2 maps to the routine MR imaging protocol significantly improved the sensitivity in the detection of 24 areas of cartilage softening (from 4.2% to 62%, P < .001), 41 areas of cartilage fibrillation (from 20% to 66%, P < .001), and 96 superficial partial-thickness cartilage defects (from 71% to 88%, P = .004). CONCLUSION The addition of a T2 mapping sequence to a routine MR protocol at 3.0 T improved sensitivity in the detection of cartilage lesions within the knee joint from 74.6% to 88.9%, with only a small reduction in specificity. The greatest improvement in sensitivity with use of the T2 maps was in the identification of early cartilage degeneration.


Arthroscopy | 1993

The effects of knee effusion on quadriceps strength and knee intraarticular pressure

Kris Jensen; Ben K. Graf

The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of varied amounts of effusion on quadriceps strength and knee intraarticular pressure (IAP) during active knee movement. Five subjects had 60 ml of saline, in 20 ml increments, infused into the right knee. Quadriceps strength and knee IAP were continuously measured at each level of effusion, while the subject performed isokinetic knee exercises. A control group of five subjects performed the same exercises, but with no saline infusion. No significant changes in quadriceps strength were seen in the control group. In the experimental group, quadriceps strength decreased as the amount of effusion increased, and increased following aspiration. The greatest decrease in strength occurred at those knee positions where IAP was highest (full flexion and extension). Results of this study indicate that quadriceps strength is diminished and IAP markedly increased when an effused knee is exercised.


Radiographics | 2014

MR Imaging–based Diagnosis and Classification of Meniscal Tears

Jie C. Nguyen; Arthur A. De Smet; Ben K. Graf; Humberto G. Rosas

Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is currently the modality of choice for detecting meniscal injuries and planning subsequent treatment. A thorough understanding of the imaging protocols, normal meniscal anatomy, surrounding anatomic structures, and anatomic variants and pitfalls is critical to ensure diagnostic accuracy and prevent unnecessary surgery. High-spatial-resolution imaging of the meniscus can be performed using fast spin-echo and three-dimensional MR imaging sequences. Normal anatomic structures that can mimic a tear include the meniscal ligament, meniscofemoral ligaments, popliteomeniscal fascicles, and meniscomeniscal ligament. Anatomic variants and pitfalls that can mimic a tear include discoid meniscus, meniscal flounce, a meniscal ossicle, and chondrocalcinosis. When a meniscal tear is identified, accurate description and classification of the tear pattern can guide the referring clinician in patient education and surgical planning. For example, longitudinal tears are often amenable to repair, whereas horizontal and radial tears may require partial meniscectomy. Tear patterns include horizontal, longitudinal, radial, root, complex, displaced, and bucket-handle tears. Occasionally, meniscal tears can be difficult to detect at imaging; however, secondary indirect signs, such as a parameniscal cyst, meniscal extrusion, or linear subchondral bone marrow edema, should increase the radiologists suspicion for an underlying tear. Awareness of common diagnostic errors can ensure accurate diagnosis of meniscal tears. Online supplemental material is available for this article.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 1991

Results of knee manipulations after anterior cruciate ligament reconstructions

Julie A. Dodds; James S. Keene; Ben K. Graf; Richard H. Lange

We analyzed the results of knee manipulations in 42 knees that had persistent flexion or extension deficits after intraarticular ACL reconstructions. All manipula tions were done under a spinal or general anesthetic and, in 10 cases, arthroscopic debridement of adhe sions also was performed. The average time from re construction to manipulation was 7 months (range, 3 to 14 months) and the average followup was 26 months (range, 6 to 56 months). At manipulation, average flex ion was increased from 95° to 136° and average ex tension from 11° to 3°. In no case was motion gained at the expense of joint stability and, at final followup, average flexion and extension were 127° and 4°, re spectively. The final range of motion achieved was not affected by the time to manipulation, severity of pre manipulation flexion deficit, or concomitant arthro scopic debridement of adhesions. However, knees with premanipulation extension deficits of ≥15° achieved significantly less final extension than knees with lesser premanipulation deficits. Overall, manipulations were a safe and effective method for improving both flexion and extension in 86% of the knees that had restricted motion after ACL reconstructions.


American Journal of Roentgenology | 2008

Clinical and MRI Findings Associated with False-Positive Knee MR Diagnoses of Medial Meniscal Tears

Arthur A. De Smet; David H. Nathan; Ben K. Graf; Benjamin Haaland; Jason P. Fine

OBJECTIVE The objective of our study was to determine if false-positive MR diagnoses of a medial meniscal tear are more common with specific clinical variables, tear type or location, or MRI findings of a longitudinal tear. MATERIALS AND METHODS We reviewed the records of 559 patients who underwent knee MR examinations and arthroscopy. We compared the positive predictive values (PPVs) of an MR diagnosis of a medial meniscal tear for differences in tear location or type, delay between knee injury and MRI, delay between MRI and arthroscopy, and the presence of an anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear. We also retrospectively reviewed the MR examinations of 50 longitudinal tears to compare the PPVs of various MRI findings of a longitudinal tear. RESULTS There was no association between either the delay between injury and MRI or the delay between MRI and arthroscopy and false-positive diagnoses. The PPV of 64% (32/50) for longitudinal tears was lower than the values of 83% (15/18) to 100% (116/116) for other types of medial meniscal tears. False-positive diagnoses of medial meniscal tears were more common in patients who had a prior episode of acute trauma (p = 0.004) or an ACL tear (p < 0.0001). Review of longitudinal tears revealed a decreased PPV when MRI showed signal contacting only the superior surface (p = 0.016) or when MRI showed signal contacting the surface at the meniscocapsular junction (p = 0.004). Four of the 18 menisci with a false-positive diagnosis of a longitudinal tear had a healed ACL tear noted at arthroscopy. CONCLUSION False-positive MR diagnoses of medial meniscal tears are more common for longitudinal tears than other tear types and are also more common with MR abnormalities at either the superior surface or the meniscocapsular junction. Spontaneous healing of longitudinal tears accounts for some false-positive MR diagnoses.

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William L. Murphy

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Arthur A. De Smet

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Mark D. Markel

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jae Sung Lee

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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James S. Keene

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Ray Vanderby

Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation

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Yan Lu

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Geoffrey S. Baer

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Richard Kijowski

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Brett Nemke

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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