DOI: 10.3390/clinpract16070123 ISSN: 2039-7283

Accessory Navicular on MRI in an Adult Ankle MRI Referral Cohort (N = 1988): Prevalence, Subtypes, and Edema Correlates

Zülküf Akdemir, Amed Çekdar Altındağ, Rıdvan Çeçen, Harun Arslan

Purpose: To determine the prevalence and subtype distribution of accessory navicular (AN) on adult ankle MRI and to evaluate MRI factors associated with AN-related bone marrow edema (BME); bilaterality was explored in patients with available contralateral MRI data. Methods: In this retrospective cross-sectional study, consecutive adult patients (≥18 years) who underwent ankle MRI between January 2022 and January 2025 at a single institution in Van, eastern Türkiye, were identified from the institutional archive. Two blinded readers assessed AN presence, classified subtypes using Coughlin criteria, measured maximal ossicle dimension for types 1–2, and recorded BME on fluid-sensitive sequences. Prevalence with 95% CIs was estimated, and multivariable logistic regression assessed factors associated with BME in patients with types 1–2. Results: Among 1988 unique patients (mean age: 42.2 ± 14.2 years; 42.6% male and 57.4% female), AN prevalence was 24.4% (95% CI: 22.6–26.4%), and type 2 predominated (50.2%). In the subgroup of AN-positive patients with available contralateral MRI data, AN was bilateral in 61 of 69 patients (88.4%). Interobserver agreement was excellent for AN detection and subtype classification (κ = 1.00 and κ = 0.98). Among types 1–2 included in the BME analysis (n = 385), BME occurred in 81 patients (21.0%). In the multivariable model, the adjusted ORs for BME were 4.46 for type 2 morphology, 1.24 per 1 mm increase in maximal dimension, 2.08 for female sex, and 0.71 per 10-year increase in age; concomitant os trigonum was not associated with BME. Conclusions: AN was common on ankle MRI, and type 2 was most strongly associated with BME; however, because this was a retrospective, cross-sectional, symptom-blinded study, causality and clinical correlation could not be established. Clinical Significance: Type 2 AN, particularly with a larger ossicle dimension, should prompt careful evaluation for MRI-detected BME, which should be interpreted as an imaging finding requiring clinical correlation.

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