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Erratum for Tung et al., Am. J. Roentgenol. 174 (4) 1107-1114.
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AJR 2000; 175:548
© American Roentgen Ray Society


Erratum

In the major paper entitled "High-Field and Low-Field MR Imaging of Superior Glenoid Labral Tears and Associated Tendon Injuries" [1] in the April issue of the AJR, we regret that Figures 2A, 3A, 4A, and 7B were suboptimal as published and that the abnormalities were not easily seen. We reprint those images here.



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Fig. 2A. —48-year-old woman with type B superior labrum. Low-field coronal oblique T1-weighted image (TR/TE, 767/26) of left shoulder shows linear area of high signal intensity (arrow) in superior labrum. This labral pattern is commonly seen at and anterior to origin of biceps tendon. At arthroscopy (not shown), superior labrum was found to be normal.

 


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Fig. 3A. —23-year-old man with type C superior labrum. High-field coronal oblique proton density—weighted image (TR/TE, 2000/40) of left shoulder shows oblique L-shaped focus of hyperintense signal intensity (arrow) that extends through articular side of superior labrum. At shoulder arthroscopy (not shown), type II superior labral anteroposterior tear was seen.

 


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Fig. 4A. —30-year-old man with type C superior labrum. High-field coronal oblique proton density—weighted image (TR/TE, 2000/20) of right shoulder shows complex branched pattern of abnormal signal intensity (arrow) that involves large area of superior labrum. At arthroscopy (not shown), type III superior labral anteroposterior tear was shown.

 


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Fig. 7B. —61-year-old man with superior labral anteroposterior (SLAP) tear and long head of biceps tendinopathy (anterior is to reader's left). Contiguous oblique sagittal image shows focus of increased signal intensity in biceps tendon (arrow) just inferior to coracohumeral ligament (arrowhead).

 

References

  1. Tung GA, Entzian D, Green A, Brody JM. High-field and low-field MR imaging of superior glenoid labral tears and asociated tendon injuries. AJR 2000;174:1107 -1114[Abstract/Free Full Text]

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