# Conservative treatments of bone marrow lesions

**Authors:** Luca Andriolo, Alessandro Sangiorgio, Massimo Berruto, Henning Madry, Giuseppe M. Peretti, Massimo Varenna, Beer Yiftah, Stefano Zaffagnini, Giuseppe Filardo

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/jeo2.70151 · Journal of Experimental Orthopaedics · 2025-04-04

## TL;DR

This paper reviews conservative treatments for bone marrow lesions in the knee and highlights promising but under-researched options.

## Contribution

A global expert review of conservative treatment strategies for knee BMLs, summarizing current evidence and identifying gaps.

## Key findings

- Unloading knee braces, shockwave therapy, and bisphosphonates showed positive results.
- Scientific literature on knee-specific BML treatments is limited.
- More research is needed on treatment duration and combinations for different BML causes.

## Abstract

Bone marrow lesions (BMLs) of the knee are a common magnetic resonance imaging finding and are present in a wide range of pathologies, including traumatic contusions and fractures, following cartilage surgery alterations, osteoarthritis, transient BMLs syndromes, subchondral insufficiency fractures of the knee and spontaneous osteonecrosis of the knee. Regardless of their aetiology, clinical management may prove challenging. This review focuses on the conservative treatment approaches to manage patients affected by knee BML, thanks to the contribution of field experts.

Experts from around the globe were involved in performing a review on the most used conservative treatment strategies to address BMLs, trying to summarize the available evidence from the most popular first‐line treatments while documenting their applications and results for the different BML aetiologies.

Positive results were documented for unloading knee braces, external shockwave therapy, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, pulsed electromagnetic fields therapy and bisphosphonates. Nonetheless, the analysis of the scientific literature documented a scarce number of publications specifically addressing the knee joint, with even less evidence when it comes to the results for the different aetiologies of BMLs.

The management of BMLs is challenging, and many factors influence clinical and radiological outcomes. This paper summarized the evidence on conservative treatments for knee BMLs. Although showing promising results, conservative options still need to be fully investigated. Open questions to be addressed concern treatment duration, BML stage and overlapping with concomitant therapies. Further studies are needed to identify the best first‐line conservative approach or treatment combination based on each BML aetiology.

Level V: expert opinion.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** osteonecrosis (MONDO:0005380), osteoarthritis (MONDO:0005178)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** osteonecrosis of the knee (MESH:D010020), subchondral insufficiency fractures of the knee (MESH:D015775), osteoarthritis (MESH:D010003), traumatic contusions (MESH:D003288), BMLs (MESH:D001855), fractures (MESH:D050723)
- **Chemicals:** oxygen (MESH:D010100), bisphosphonates (MESH:D004164)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11970530/full.md

## References

107 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11970530/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11970530