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Real-Time Visualization of Human Finger Joint Cavitation (2015)

a day ago
  • #joint cracking
  • #cavitation
  • #tribonucleation
  • The study uses real-time cine MRI to visualize joint cracking in metacarpophalangeal joints, showing that the cracking sound is associated with rapid cavity formation (tribonucleation) rather than bubble collapse.
  • Historical perspectives are reviewed: Roston and Haines (1947) linked cracking to cavity formation, while Unsworth et al. (1971) proposed bubble collapse as the cause; this study supports the former.
  • During traction, cine MRI at 3.2 fps captured rapid joint separation and cavity inception coinciding with sound production; the cavity persisted after cracking and did not collapse.
  • The results align with tribonucleation, where opposing surfaces resist separation until a critical point, then separate rapidly, creating a sustained gas cavity from dissolved synovial gas.
  • Limitations include inability to visualize the entire joint due to slice thickness, lack of measured traction forces, and unexplained sound magnitude, but the findings provide a new framework for studying joint health outcomes.