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DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-1777014
Popliteal Artery-Related Pathologies in Athletes—A Primer for Musculoskeletal Radiologists
Funding None.
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Pathogenesis of Popliteal Artery Complications in Athletes
- Popliteal Artery Injury in Knee Dislocation
- Popliteal Artery Entrapment Syndrome
- Cystic Adventitial Disease of the Popliteal Artery
- Compartment Syndromes
- Venous Thrombosis Mimicking Popliteal Artery Thrombosis
- Conclusion
- References
Abstract
Vascular complications in athletes are common and mimic musculoskeletal injuries such as muscle sprains, fractures, and cartilage abnormalities. They include traumatic vascular injuries and more subtle pathologies like entrapment syndromes, pseudoaneurysms, arterial occlusions, and venous thrombosis. Such vascular complications may be occult on imaging and can be difficult for a musculoskeletal radiologist to diagnose, resulting in a lack of timely diagnosis and potentially limb-threatening consequences. Although the final diagnosis may require multidisciplinary input from orthopaedic, sports and exercise medicine, and vascular and interventional radiology inputs, a musculoskeletal radiologist with prior knowledge of such conditions can be the first to diagnose such conditions aiding the athlete's performance. A musculoskeletal radiologist should pay due attention to anatomical courses of vascular channels and look for potential causes of vascular compression, aberrant myotendinous bands, accessory muscles, etc., before concluding a computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as normal. Doppler ultrasound, CT, or MR angiography are commonly employed techniques for primary evaluation, whereas digital subtraction angiography is generally reserved for troubleshooting as advanced dynamic imaging.
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Introduction
Performance-related musculoskeletal injuries can be classified according to the mechanisms producing them into collision-related acute injuries, chronic repetitive stress, or shearing force-related injuries.[1] In elite athletes, accurate diagnosis and subsequent management of the musculoskeletal ailment is paramount in deciding its prognosis and, in turn, time to return to play.
Musculoskeletal radiologists are traditionally trained to identify even the most subtle of musculoskeletal injuries. However, identifying appropriate neurovascular structures and qualifying and quantifying neurovascular abnormality may serve as potential areas of satisfaction in the search for a musculoskeletal radiologist. In general, interventional radiologists generally manage vascular complications in the general population and elite athletes. Hence, the musculoskeletal radiology literature on sports-related vascular complications in extremities is lacking. Performance-related pressure always remains critical for an elite athlete, and missing vascular complications such as arterial or deep venous thrombosis (DVT), traumatic pseudoaneurysm, and entrapment syndromes may result in a potential limb-threatening ischemia costing a career to the athlete in addition to a significant medicolegal challenge to the radiologist. Hence, the musculoskeletal radiologist must approach imaging of an athlete with a new-onset limb pain with a high index of suspicion to diagnose vascular complications. Differentials should include musculoskeletal as well as nonmusculoskeletal diagnoses in such cases.
Traumatic involvement of the lower limb vessels ranges from acute high-velocity injuries from falls and collisions leading to crushing/penetrating injuries or contact sports, causing nonpenetrating/blunt trauma. The latter affects the popliteal artery most commonly, followed by the common femoral artery, superficial femoral artery, and anterior tibial arteries in decreasing order of frequency.[2] Conversely, nontraumatic vascular complications are fundamentally different from their traumatic counterparts in clinical examination and diagnostic workup apart from imaging and subsequent management; their detailed discussion is beyond the scope of this article. Therefore, we have summarized clinical findings and work up of traumatic and nontraumatic knee injuries in [Table 1].
Abbreviations: ABPI, ankle brachial pressure index; BMI, body mass index; CECS, chronic exertional compartment syndrome; CTA, computed tomographic angiography; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; DSA, digital subtraction angiography; DVT, deep venous thrombosis; ICP, intracompartmental pressure; MRA, magnetic resonance angiography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PAES, popliteal artery entrapment syndrome; SBP, systolic blood pressure.
In this pictorial review, we shall discuss the pathogenesis of various sports-related vascular complications, both traumatic and nontraumatic, and their imaging appearances.
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Pathogenesis of Popliteal Artery Complications in Athletes
Traumatic
Popliteal artery injury is a well-documented complication of knee dislocation and open knee injuries in 30 to 50% of cases.[3] Contact sports, high-velocity trauma such as motorbike racing and cycling, track-and-field events such as high-jump and long-jump and dashboard injuries in motorsports are the most common causes of knee dislocations with concomitant popliteal artery injuries in athletes. A relatively fixed course of the popliteal artery between the adductor hiatus and the soleus arch predisposes it to sustain various types of trauma, including intimal injury ([Fig. 1]), avulsion, occlusion, or aneurysm formation ([Fig. 2]). Arterial shear forces and chronic repetitive microtrauma can result in pseudoaneurysms, rarely arterial thrombosis ([Fig. 3]) and emboli.






Venous thrombosis is another known complication following appendicular trauma. According to Virchow's triad, three important factors are responsible for DVT—blood flow, blood components, and blood vessels. Trauma can have varying elements of Virchow's triad of hypercoagulability, endothelial injury, and venous stasis. The predominant component of traumatic DVT is the exposed thrombogenic subintimal layer following blunt intimal injury.[4]
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Nontraumatic
Nontraumatic lower limb vascular complications in athletes are less apparent on imaging and require a high index of suspicion as the athlete may be asymptomatic at rest. The symptoms are only reproducible with vigorous exercise. Researchers have postulated various muscular, ligamentous, and vascular adaptations such as external iliac artery endofibrosis following rigorous training regimes with or without background variant anatomy as causative factors for such complications.[5] [6]
Popliteal artery entrapment syndrome (PAES) has various anatomic etiologies. Six types of PAES ([Fig. 4]) are described in the literature[7] [8] based on aberrant vascular or muscular anatomy or functional cause (type VI). Type III PAES is the most common type caused by an accessory muscular slip of the medial head of the gastrocnemius compressing the popliteal artery.


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Popliteal Artery Injury in Knee Dislocation
Popliteal artery injuries are common with knee dislocation ([Fig. 3]) and open knee injuries following high-velocity injuries or falls. When the knee is imaged as part of the polytrauma computed tomography (CT), evaluating the knee joint and assessing the patency of the popliteal artery and possible vascular injuries are essential. CT angiography (CTA) is the gold standard investigation in acute settings to diagnose the exact site, length of the injured arterial segment, and associated complications such as acute extravasation, pseudoaneurysm or aneurysm formation, for which ultrasound is often the initial imaging modality of choice. Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) can provide advanced diagnostic and therapeutic to confirm the diagnosis.[9] [10]
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Popliteal Artery Entrapment Syndrome
PAES is a vascular compression syndrome caused by an aberrant course of the popliteal artery or an accessory muscular slip (type I through V) compressing the artery ([Fig. 5A] and [B]) or hypertrophied medial gastrocnemius compressing the popliteal artery on a functional basis (type VI) ([Fig. 6]). Caution must be exercised as narrowing of the popliteal artery during ankle dorsiflexion and plantar flexion may also occur in the general population, and it is vital to correlate the patient's symptoms before diagnosing PAES. In a symptomatic patient, the disappearance of the pedal pulse following exercise with the development of symptoms and corresponding imaging appearances described below should alert the clinicians for PAES.




On Doppler ultrasound, PAES is diagnosed by popliteal artery stenosis, increased velocity and resistance, and decreased peak systolic velocity, especially after exercise ([Fig. 6]).[11]
CTA, in PAES, demonstrates narrowing of the popliteal artery behind the knee and can also provide multiplanar and volumetric reconstructions to delineate anatomy better. It may require three separate contrast bolus and scan with the foot in dorsal flexion, plantar flexion, and neutral position for functional evaluation of the artery.[7] We recommend scanning both lower limbs because of the high incidence of bilateral disease.
Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA), like CTA, is a noninvasive imaging technique. It is usually indicated in cases where conventional MRI fails to demonstrate structure causes or in suspected functional PAES cases. Its advantages include lack of radiation, excellent soft-tissue contrast resolution aiding diagnosis of aberrant musculature and its multiplanar acquisition. MRA usually suffers from an underestimation of stenosis when the vessel is narrowed by less than 50% and volume averaging[12] ([Fig. 5C]). However, recently developed three-dimensional T1-weighted spoiled gradient echo sequences exploit short time-to-repeat and echo time and are ideal for multiphasic vascular studies. Using gadolinium-based contrast media provides excellent spatial resolution, high signal-to-noise ratio, and reduced flow-related artifacts. Subtraction techniques also improve contrast resolution where “mask images” of background tissues are acquired before contrast bolus and are subtracted from post-contrast images. Various trigger or bolus tracking methods are used to obtain optimum vascular opacification. We use the fluorotrigger method at our institute where the radiographer triggers the post-contrast once the contrast bolus opacifies the popliteal artery to a certain extent ([Table 2]). Alternatively, the time-resolved MRA acquisition method is generally used for suspected PAES where multiple acquisitions are performed over successive time points scanning a single volume, for example, the entire course of popliteal arteries from mid-thighs to mid-calves in different ankle positions.[13]
Abbreviations: FT, fluorotrigger; MRA, magnetic resonance angiography; MSK, musculoskeletal; PD, proton density.
DSA remains the standard method of imaging with therapeutic advantages. It can diagnose popliteal artery narrowing with the ability to capture dynamic images during stress maneuvers and also depict vessel wall irregularity, aneurysm formation and thrombosis.[14]
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Cystic Adventitial Disease of the Popliteal Artery
It is a rare disease most commonly involving the popliteal artery in male subjects in their 40s. Thought to be of embryological origin,[15] the cystic adventitial disease is characterized by multiple mucoid cyst formation in the arterial wall compressing its lumen during knee flexion resulting in symptoms of claudication in subjects with no features of premature atherosclerosis.[16]
Grayscale ultrasound may demonstrate multiple cysts along the artery's anatomical course, and Doppler ultrasound may demonstrate arterial occlusion. Conventional angiography/DSA may appear normal or uncommonly demonstrate characteristic scimitar or hourglass signs.[17] On CT, cysts appear as hypoattenuating structures in the arterial wall compressing its lumen, which show peripheral rim enhancement owing to enhancing wall and nonenhancing mucoid material.[18] On MRI, cysts appear as hyperintense structures on T2-weighted images, which return variable signals on T1-weighted images depending upon mucoid content[19] ([Fig. 7]). Occasionally, cysts communicate with the synovial membrane of the knee joint.


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Compartment Syndromes
Acute traumatic compartment syndrome is a clinical diagnosis aided by intracompartmental pressure measurement. Rarely, cross-sectional imaging, MRI in particular, can be performed in equivocal cases demonstrating edema, hematoma, vascular injury, and soft tissue inflammation ([Fig. 8]) or any other precipitating secondary cause increasing the volume of an affected muscular compartment. However, such imaging appearances are nonspecific for compartment syndrome when not correlated with the clinical history.[20] Fasciotomy is the mainstay of treatment.


Chronic exertional compartment syndrome is one of the common causes of lower extremity pain in athletes, characterized by exercise-induced increase in compartment pressures. Intracompartmental pressure measurement and clinical examination findings are diagnostic, as described in [Table 1]. MRI may show compartment-specific muscle edema correlating with clinical features. Treatment is conservative, consisting of prolonging rest for 2 to 3 months followed by a gradual return of activity.
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Venous Thrombosis Mimicking Popliteal Artery Thrombosis
Venous thrombosis in athletes can either be due to a traumatic event or can be effort-induced (Paget-Schroetter syndrome). Traumatic DVT most commonly occurs in the popliteal, posterior tibial, and peroneal arteries. Risk factors associated with increased chances of DVT in nontraumatic settings include immobilization, coagulopathy, intense exercise, dehydration causing hemoconcentration and polycythemia, and anabolic steroid abuse. Doppler ultrasound remains the preferred investigation for detecting DVT, although conventional angiogram and CT venogram can be used for troubleshooting.[21]
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Conclusion
Popliteal artery related-complications are a common occurrence in athletes hampering their professional abilities. They mimic various musculoskeletal ailments and may be challenging diagnoses to the musculoskeletal radiologist as one has to think outside the box for a vascular diagnosis. However, detailed knowledge of normal and variant anatomy and sport-induced physiological changes in lower limb muscles and vessels enables reporting musculoskeletal radiologists to diagnose them early, potentially improving or saving the athlete's career.
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Conflict of Interest
None declared.
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References
- 1 Darling RC, Buckley CJ, Abbott WM, Raines JK. Intermittent claudication in young athletes: popliteal artery entrapment syndrome. J Trauma 1974; 14 (07) 543-552
- 2 Sriussadaporn S. Arterial injuries of the lower extremity from blunt trauma. J Med Assoc Thai 1997; 80 (02) 121-129
- 3 Frykberg ER. Popliteal vascular injuries. Surg Clin North Am 2002; 82 (01) 67-89
- 4 Toker S, Hak DJ, Morgan SJ. “Deep Vein Thrombosis Prophylaxis in Trauma Patients”, Thrombosis, vol. 2011, 2011
- 5 Abraham P, Saumet JL, Chevalier JM. External iliac artery endofibrosis in athletes. Sports Med 1997; 24 (04) 221-226
- 6 Ehsan O, Darwish A, Edmundson C, Mills V, Al-Khaffaf H. Non-traumatic lower limb vascular complications in endurance athletes. Review of literature. Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg 2004; 28 (01) 1-8
- 7 Eliahou R, Sosna J, Bloom AI. Between a rock and a hard place: clinical and imaging features of vascular compression syndromes. Radiographics 2012; 32 (01) E33-E49
- 8 Wright LB, Matchett WJ, Cruz CP. et al. Popliteal artery disease: diagnosis and treatment. Radiographics 2004; 24 (02) 467-479
- 9 Nicola R, Kawakyu-O'Connor D, Scalgione M. Imaging of vascular injuries of the extremities. Semin Musculoskelet Radiol 2017; 21 (03) 336-348
- 10 Khurana A, Quencer K, Saini A. et al. Endovascular interventions in the management of acute extremity trauma: a narrative review. Ann Transl Med 2021; 9 (14) 1197
- 11 di Marzo L, Cavallaro A, Sciacca V. et al. Diagnosis of popliteal artery entrapment syndrome: the role of duplex scanning. J Vasc Surg 1991; 13 (03) 434-438
- 12 Kim HK, Shin MJ, Kim SM, Lee SH, Hong HJ. Popliteal artery entrapment syndrome: morphological classification utilizing MR imaging. Skeletal Radiol 2006; 35 (09) 648-658
- 13 Murphy DJ, Aghayev A, Steigner ML. Vascular CT and MRI: a practical guide to imaging protocols. Insights Imaging 2018; 9 (02) 215-236
- 14 Özkan U, Oğuzkurt L, Tercan F, Pourbagher A. MRI and DSA findings in popliteal artery entrapment syndrome. Diagn Interv Radiol 2008; 14 (02) 106-110
- 15 Levien LJ, Benn CA. Adventitial cystic disease: a unifying hypothesis. J Vasc Surg 1998; 28 (02) 193-205
- 16 Sys J, Michielsen J, Bleyn J, Martens M. Adventitial cystic disease of the popliteal artery in a triathlete. A case report. Am J Sports Med 1997; 25 (06) 854-857
- 17 Ricci P, Panzetti C, Mastantuono M. et al. Cross-sectional imaging in a case of adventitial cystic disease of the popliteal artery. Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol 1999; 22 (01) 71-74
- 18 Ortiz M WR, Lopera JE, Giménez CR, Restrepo S, Moncada R, Castañeda-Zúñiga WR. Bilateral adventitial cystic disease of the popliteal artery: a case report. Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol 2006; 29 (02) 306-310
- 19 Holden A, Merrilees S, Mitchell N, Hill A. Magnetic resonance imaging of popliteal artery pathologies. Eur J Radiol 2008; 67 (01) 159-168
- 20 McDonald S, Bearcroft P. Compartment syndromes. Semin Musculoskelet Radiol 2010; 14 (02) 236-244
- 21 Menon D, Onida S, Davies AH. Overview of venous pathology related to repetitive vascular trauma in athletes. J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord 2019; 7 (05) 756-762
Address for correspondence
Publication History
Article published online:
23 November 2023
© 2023. Indian Radiological Association. This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
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References
- 1 Darling RC, Buckley CJ, Abbott WM, Raines JK. Intermittent claudication in young athletes: popliteal artery entrapment syndrome. J Trauma 1974; 14 (07) 543-552
- 2 Sriussadaporn S. Arterial injuries of the lower extremity from blunt trauma. J Med Assoc Thai 1997; 80 (02) 121-129
- 3 Frykberg ER. Popliteal vascular injuries. Surg Clin North Am 2002; 82 (01) 67-89
- 4 Toker S, Hak DJ, Morgan SJ. “Deep Vein Thrombosis Prophylaxis in Trauma Patients”, Thrombosis, vol. 2011, 2011
- 5 Abraham P, Saumet JL, Chevalier JM. External iliac artery endofibrosis in athletes. Sports Med 1997; 24 (04) 221-226
- 6 Ehsan O, Darwish A, Edmundson C, Mills V, Al-Khaffaf H. Non-traumatic lower limb vascular complications in endurance athletes. Review of literature. Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg 2004; 28 (01) 1-8
- 7 Eliahou R, Sosna J, Bloom AI. Between a rock and a hard place: clinical and imaging features of vascular compression syndromes. Radiographics 2012; 32 (01) E33-E49
- 8 Wright LB, Matchett WJ, Cruz CP. et al. Popliteal artery disease: diagnosis and treatment. Radiographics 2004; 24 (02) 467-479
- 9 Nicola R, Kawakyu-O'Connor D, Scalgione M. Imaging of vascular injuries of the extremities. Semin Musculoskelet Radiol 2017; 21 (03) 336-348
- 10 Khurana A, Quencer K, Saini A. et al. Endovascular interventions in the management of acute extremity trauma: a narrative review. Ann Transl Med 2021; 9 (14) 1197
- 11 di Marzo L, Cavallaro A, Sciacca V. et al. Diagnosis of popliteal artery entrapment syndrome: the role of duplex scanning. J Vasc Surg 1991; 13 (03) 434-438
- 12 Kim HK, Shin MJ, Kim SM, Lee SH, Hong HJ. Popliteal artery entrapment syndrome: morphological classification utilizing MR imaging. Skeletal Radiol 2006; 35 (09) 648-658
- 13 Murphy DJ, Aghayev A, Steigner ML. Vascular CT and MRI: a practical guide to imaging protocols. Insights Imaging 2018; 9 (02) 215-236
- 14 Özkan U, Oğuzkurt L, Tercan F, Pourbagher A. MRI and DSA findings in popliteal artery entrapment syndrome. Diagn Interv Radiol 2008; 14 (02) 106-110
- 15 Levien LJ, Benn CA. Adventitial cystic disease: a unifying hypothesis. J Vasc Surg 1998; 28 (02) 193-205
- 16 Sys J, Michielsen J, Bleyn J, Martens M. Adventitial cystic disease of the popliteal artery in a triathlete. A case report. Am J Sports Med 1997; 25 (06) 854-857
- 17 Ricci P, Panzetti C, Mastantuono M. et al. Cross-sectional imaging in a case of adventitial cystic disease of the popliteal artery. Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol 1999; 22 (01) 71-74
- 18 Ortiz M WR, Lopera JE, Giménez CR, Restrepo S, Moncada R, Castañeda-Zúñiga WR. Bilateral adventitial cystic disease of the popliteal artery: a case report. Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol 2006; 29 (02) 306-310
- 19 Holden A, Merrilees S, Mitchell N, Hill A. Magnetic resonance imaging of popliteal artery pathologies. Eur J Radiol 2008; 67 (01) 159-168
- 20 McDonald S, Bearcroft P. Compartment syndromes. Semin Musculoskelet Radiol 2010; 14 (02) 236-244
- 21 Menon D, Onida S, Davies AH. Overview of venous pathology related to repetitive vascular trauma in athletes. J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord 2019; 7 (05) 756-762















