Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3981533 Clinical Radiology 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

AimTo determine the accuracy of MRI versus ultrasound for Morton's neuroma.Materials and methodsA search was undertaken for clinical studies published in any language in PubMed up to the date of December 2013. Studies assessing the accuracy of the ultrasound or MRI for the diagnosis of Morton's neuroma were included. Data were pooled for meta-analysis. Study selection, data collection, and extraction were performed independently by two authors. Meta-disc 1.4 and Revman 5.2 software were applied for statistical analysis.ResultsThe study included 12 studies; 217 patients underwent MRI and 241 underwent ultrasound examinations. There appeared greater diagnostic accuracy for ultrasound than MRI for the diagnosis of Morton's neuroma (ultrasound sensitivity 90%, specificity 88%, positive likelihood ratio 2.77, negative likelihood ratio 0.16 versus MRI sensitivity 93%, specificity 68%, positive likelihood ratio 1.89, negative likelihood ratio 0.19).ConclusionsThe available evidence suggests that ultrasound can provide better accuracy for the diagnosis of Morton's neuroma than MRI.

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