Mri Scan Right Sternoclavicular Joint

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Mri Scan Right Sternoclavicular Joint
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Mri Scan Right Sternoclavicular Joint, in Visit Clinic

A detailed scan of the right sternoclavicular joint to find injury, inflammation, infection, arthritis, or tumors in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a Mri Scan Right Sternoclavicular Joint Test in Visit Clinic?

An MRI of the right sternoclavicular joint creates detailed pictures of the joint where the collarbone meets the breastbone. It shows bones, cartilage, ligaments, joint fluid, and nearby soft tissues. This information is important to find causes of pain, swelling, stiffness, instability, or masses. Doctors use the scan to diagnose arthritis, injury, infection, dislocation, or tumors. It also helps plan surgery and monitor treatment response without radiation exposure.

Mri Scan Right Sternoclavicular Joint Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

Mri Scan Right Sternoclavicular Joint Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The Mri Scan Right Sternoclavicular Joint test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a Mri Scan Right Sternoclavicular Joint Test in Visit Clinic?

MRI SCAN RIGHT STERNOCLAVICULAR JOINT is usually ordered as part of musculoskeletal imaging for joint pain or trauma. It is requested when a patient has localized pain, swelling, limited motion, a suspected dislocation, or persistent symptoms after injury. The scan helps diagnose arthritis, infection, fractures, inflammatory disease, or tumors. Abnormal findings often come from trauma, infection, autoimmune conditions, or malignancy, and a family history of joint disease can make this test more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is the right sternoclavicular joint in Visit Clinic?plus

The right sternoclavicular joint is the synovial articulation between the medial end of the right clavicle and the manubrium of the sternum (and first costal cartilage). It is a saddle-type joint with a fibrocartilaginous disc and strong ligaments (sternoclavicular, costoclavicular, interclavicular). It allows elevation, depression, protraction, retraction and rotation of the shoulder girdle and is innervated by cervical plexus branches and the nerve to subclavius.

What is the best imaging for the sternoclavicular joint in Visit Clinic?plus

Computed tomography (CT) with thin‑slice cuts and 3D reconstruction is the investigation of choice for sternoclavicular joint bony injury and suspected dislocation, giving excellent detail of alignment and fractures. MRI is preferred for soft‑tissue, ligamentous injury, marrow edema and infection. Plain radiographs often miss SCJ pathology; ultrasound can help detect effusion but is operator‑dependent.

How serious is the sternoclavicular in Visit Clinic?plus

The sternoclavicular joint is usually not life‑threatening, but some problems can be serious. Anterior dislocations cause pain, swelling and limited shoulder movement and often respond to conservative care; posterior dislocations are rarer but potentially dangerous because they may compress the airway or major vessels, needing urgent assessment. Infection or chronic arthritis also requires prompt treatment. Seek immediate care for breathing, swallowing, or severe neurovascular symptoms.

How to fix sternoclavicular joint pain in Visit Clinic?plus

Rest and protect the joint, use ice for acute swelling and heat for stiffness, and take NSAIDs as directed for pain. Immobilize briefly with a sling if needed, then begin gentle range-of-motion and shoulder‑blade strengthening exercises with a physiotherapist. Avoid heavy lifting and contact activities. See a doctor for swelling, deformity, severe pain or instability — imaging, injections or surgery may be needed for persistent cases.

Can a sternoclavicular joint be repaired in Visit Clinic?plus

Yes — the sternoclavicular joint can often be treated nonoperatively (rest, immobilization, physiotherapy) or repaired surgically when unstable, chronically painful, or posteriorly dislocated. Surgical options include open reduction, ligament reconstruction with tendon grafts, fixation, or medial clavicle excision. Posterior dislocations may need urgent surgery because of nearby vessels and airways. Recovery involves immobilization and graded physiotherapy; risks include infection and neurovascular injury.

Why is my right sternoclavicular joint swollen in Visit Clinic?plus

Swelling at the right sternoclavicular joint can result from trauma or dislocation, osteoarthritis or inflammatory arthritis (e.g., rheumatoid or seronegative spondyloarthropathies), crystal arthropathy (gout/pseudogout), or septic arthritis. Look for pain, redness, warmth, fever, or limited shoulder movement; posterior dislocation may affect breathing or swallowing. Seek prompt medical evaluation, imaging, and possible blood tests or joint aspiration if infection is suspected.