Interactive Transcript
0:01
This vignette,
0:02
which in correlation with other vignettes,
0:04
has been focusing on the six components of the cuff:
0:08
supraspinatus, infraspinatus, Teres minor,
0:10
subscapularis, coracohumeral ligament, and capsule
0:14
is now going to address the arches about the shoulder.
0:19
Arches, you say? Well, quite well, you may.
0:23
I'll explain them now, there are three of them.
0:26
Let's begin with the one everybody knows,
0:29
the medial arch, the arch below the AC joint.
0:33
First, everybody has an abnormal AC joint.
0:37
So you have to decide when you want to put the hammer down
0:40
on the joint, and the answer should be not very often.
0:44
But as far as impingement goes...
0:46
Impingement is a clinical syndrome of inflammation
0:49
and cuff disease, and labral disease.
0:51
So if you have encroachment on the medial aspect of the arch,
0:55
call it just that, stenosis or encroachment.
0:58
But don't use the word impingement,
1:00
because the myotendinous unit is so strong and so powerful,
1:04
it almost never gets interrupted at this medial arch.
1:08
It may get compressed a little bit,
1:10
but it's usually asymptomatic.
1:12
The most important arch is the subacromial
1:15
arch underneath the acromion,
1:16
where the acromion may appear like a shelf or a keel,
1:20
or a telephone receiver, and contributes to
1:23
impingement syndrome anatomically.
1:27
And then we have the third arch, the forgotten arch,
1:30
the coracoid arch that contributes to coracoid abutment
1:34
syndrome and a condition known as anterosuperior
1:38
impingement syndrome, also known as ASI.
1:43
There is a coracoid index.
1:45
There's a distance that some have proposed between
1:48
the coracoid and the humeral head.
1:50
None of those things work very well. I'm not a measurer.
1:53
I almost never measure.
1:55
What do I do?
1:55
I look at the degree of compression or encroachment
1:58
of the tissues underneath it. Are they inflamed?
2:02
Are they damaged?
2:04
And are there secondary signs that there is abutment
2:08
between the coracoid and the humeral head,
2:10
like small, irritative pseudocysts and pitting,
2:14
which there is.
2:16
You might say, well, there's a pretty good distance here.
2:18
You're right.
2:18
But what about when they're lying down?
2:20
What about when they're throwing?
2:22
What about when their arm is cocked?
2:25
There's probably abutment at some
2:27
chain in that chain of events.
2:30
And the same thing is true for the other types of
2:33
pseudocysts and erosions that you see in the humeral head.
2:36
We're in the back of the shoulder,
2:38
there's usually contact with the acromion with the arm cocked.
2:40
If they're in the front of the shoulder,
2:43
there's usually contact with the acromion with the arm
2:46
in front of the mid-coronal plane.
2:48
The three arches,
2:50
the medial arch at the level of the AC joint,
2:53
contributing sometimes to stenosis,
2:56
but rarely contributing to actual inflammatory
2:59
impingement or cuff tears.
3:00
The lateral arch,
3:02
the major contributor and the oft-forgotten,
3:05
subcoracoid arch, deep to the coracoid
3:08
in front of the humeral head.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.