# Association betweensubchondral bone sclerosis and pain in varus ankle osteoarthritis: a CT-based analysis using patient-reported outcomes

**Authors:** Dan Moriwaki, Tomoyuki Nakasa, Yasunari Ikuta, Saori Ishibashi, Satoru Sakurai, Taro Chujo, Nobuo Adachi

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00402-025-06096-0 · Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery · 2025-10-17

## TL;DR

This study finds that subchondral bone sclerosis, as measured by CT scans, is strongly linked to pain in patients with varus ankle osteoarthritis, even when X-rays show minimal damage.

## Contribution

The study shows that subchondral bone sclerosis correlates with pain independent of radiographic severity in varus ankle OA.

## Key findings

- Pain scores correlated strongly with CT-derived Hounsfield unit (HU) ratios of subchondral bone.
- Higher HU ratios, advanced OA stage, and thick synovium were significantly associated with severe pain in multivariate analysis.
- HU ratios correlated with pain even in areas with preserved joint space on radiographs.

## Abstract

Although severe pain caused by progressive ankle osteoarthritis (OA) impairs patients’ quality of life, factors associated with severe pain in ankle OA are unknown. This study aimed to analyze the characteristics of pain and the association between pain, radiographic alignment, and computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings in patients with varus ankle OA.

Seventy-five ankles from 73 patients with varus ankle OA who underwent surgery were retrospectively reviewed. Pain was evaluated using the self-administered foot evaluation questionnaire (SAFE-Q). Ankle alignment was assessed by radiography. Subchondral bone sclerosis was assessed by CT-derived Hounsfield unit (HU) ratio, and synovitis and bone marrow edema (BME) were assessed by MRI. The relationship between pain and imaging findings was analyzed.

Pain and pain-related scores in the SAFE-Q significantly correlated with the Takakura-Tanaka classification stage (r = − 0.529), osteophyte score (r = − 0.460), HU ratios (r = − 0.729), synovial thickness score (r = − 0.387), and BME area (r = − 0.475). Multivariate analysis revealed that high HU ratio, progressed OA stage, and thick synovium were significantly associated with severe pain. Notably, HU ratios showed moderate to strong correlations with pain, regardless of radiographic severity, even in the regions where joint space was radiographically preserved.

Subchondral bone sclerosis, OA severity, and synovitis are significantly correlated with pain in patients with varus ankle OA. The novel finding is that HU ratios of subchondral bone correlate with pain irrespective of radiographic stage, suggesting that severe pain reflects hidden mechanical stress and cartilage degeneration associated with subchondral sclerosis. Varus ankle OA with severe pain should be managed early and appropriately, regardless of radiographic severity.

III.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** osteoarthritis (MONDO:0005178)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** synovitis (MESH:D013585), bone sclerosis (MESH:D001847), OA (MESH:D010003), BME (MESH:D004487), subchondral sclerosis (MESH:D001845), Pain (MESH:D010146), cartilage degeneration (MESH:D002357), Varus ankle OA (MESH:D016512)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12534322