Interactive Transcript
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Okay, this is a 21-year-old pitcher who
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complains of decreased range of motion.
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Perhaps he's guarding.
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And we've got a series of coronal images before you.
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A T1 fat-weighted image on the left.
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In the center of the ring, T2 spin
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echo image without fat suppression.
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In the blue corner on the right-hand side, we've
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got a proton density fat suppression image.
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We're on instability.
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Could be micro, could be macro
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instability, could be combinations thereof.
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So, many of you have locked onto this signal
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in the suprapostralateral humeral head.
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And thinking instability, you might think Hill-Sachs.
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But you'd be wrong.
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Hill-Sachs is going to be located in the 12 o'clock
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position or within 2 to 5 millimeters thereof.
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Can they be lateral?
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Yes, they can.
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But are they etched?
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Are they notched?
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Do they have a sharp edge to them?
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Well, only if they're hatchets, you
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know, with recurrent dislocation.
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They'll look something like this.
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But they won't look like erosions.
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And typically, in overhead athletes, especially
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pitchers and javelin throwers and volleyball players,
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from continued abduction and external rotation,
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the humerus is going to swing out, and this area
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is going to come in contact with the acromion.
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When that happens, you develop a trough.
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Underneath that trough, you often develop
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pseudocysts or intraosseous ganglia.
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These are signs of impingement.
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They are not signs of a Hill-Sachs lesion.
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So if you automatically go down the road of a
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Hill-Sachs lesion, you're going to end up over
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reading Bankart and macro instability lesions.
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have labral ligamentous disease and not have a Hill-Sachs.
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And one of those times is when you have an
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overhead athlete, you have big-time deceleration,
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uh, injuries with high-velocity activities.
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And unfortunately, these patients, all these
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overhead athletes have signs of impingement with
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troughs and pits that simulate Hill-Sachs lesions.
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And I've seen people operated for these lesions as
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labral pathology when no labral pathology exists.
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But in this case, labral pathology does exist.
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Let's look at all three images.
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The T1-weighted image.
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The architecture of the glenoid is normal.
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The architecture of the inferior glenohumeral ligament?
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Ill-defined.
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Gray.
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Swollen.
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Let's look at the T2.
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The ligament proper.
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In other words, here is the axillary band of the IGHL.
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It's intact.
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Let's look at it anteriorly.
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It's still intact.
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A little bit redundant, folded on itself.
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Let's go to the back.
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It's a little droopy, as it often is in a throwing athlete.
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And here's how neat it becomes.
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Stretched, but it's intact.
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Now let's go to the uber-sensitive PD image.
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And the labral ligamentous relationship
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to the glenoid is disrupted.
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The labrum. Remember, you should never have
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signal going all the way across the labrum,
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medialized towards the center of the patient.
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That is a sign of a tear.
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So the labral ligamentous complex has pulled off, yanked
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off, detached from the inferior aspect of the glenoid.
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And it's through and through.
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And it involves the periosteum.
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It has to.
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Because there's periosteum right here.
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So right at the junction of the periosteum
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and the labrum, it has come out.
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So now let's look at the axial projection.
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We have two axial projections.
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Let's put them up in conjunction with one coronal.
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There's one, there's the second.
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And now let's scroll.
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I'm gonna blow them up a little bit, so
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they're a little easier for you to see.
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The one on the right is a gradient echo, the one
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in the center is a proton density fat suppression.
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And, I am sure that many of you are looking at this
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thinking, "Oh, that's got to be a Hill-Sachs lesion."
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And on the PD, it's kind of ill-defined, so it takes the
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T1-weighted image to define the character of this lesion.
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It takes the coronal to define the
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position of this lesion in an impinger.
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Let's start up high, everything looks fine.
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The labrum is smaller up high.
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As we go down, the labrum should get bigger and blacker.
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And it does.
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It gets bigger and blacker than the superior labrum.
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It gets bigger and blacker than the posterior labrum.
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Yes, there are some small linear fissures inside,
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none of which are giving rise to paralabral cysts.
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None of which are giving rise to focal areas of swelling.
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Yes, there's a little bit of swelling around the labrum.
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So these are probably small wear-and-tear type fissures
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that have occurred in the labrum in this throwing athlete.
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There's also a small little rim dit
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at the base of the labrum right there.
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Not uncommon, very shallow in throwing athletes.
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Now when they're really deep, they may
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give rise to something known as a GLAD
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lesion, a Glen labral articular disruption.
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But that's not the problem.
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The problem is down low.
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So look at this potential pitfall.
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You're scrolling in the an inferior
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aspect of a labrum, and it looks.
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Hunky-dory.
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Nothing is separated.
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Nothing is detached.
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And the reason is, you're not in the region
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where the labral ligamentous injury occurred.
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That's down here, in the axillary space.
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So this is a tricky case.
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It's tricky because The injury in this throwing athlete
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is axillary rather than anterior or anteroaxillary.
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It's tricky because he's an impinger, and the impingement
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related trough is simulating a Hill-Sachs lesion.
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This is very dangerous.
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When you call this a Hill-Sachs lesion, it's
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very embarrassing when it turns out not to be.
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Especially if there's no problem
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in the anteroinferior labrum.
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Now over time, these non-displaced lesions,
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if the patient isn't properly rested, will
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become flat out, very detached, bankrupt.
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So they'll separate.
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In other words, let's put up the coronal again.
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This will eventually separate.
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If you rest the patient, this can granulate
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in, it can scar in, it absolutely can heal.
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Now as the degree of displacement increases,
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The anteroinferior glenoid becomes bare and
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if the patient continues to dislocate, what'll
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happen is this area will just gradually erode
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down and become flatter and flatter and flatter.
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So you'll lose some glenoid bone stock.
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Another reason to recognize that
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the patient has instability.
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And with repeated dislocation, you'll start
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to see hyaline cartilage flaps and these
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flaps may detach from the glenoid fossa.
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So there's a progression.
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If this goes unchecked, the progression is, glenoid,
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sorry, the labrum floats away, the extent of the
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labral tear progresses from the bottom to the
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top, the patient starts to wear away the bone,
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the patient starts to wear away the cartilage, and
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the cartilage separates from the underlying bone.
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So, tricky case, impinger, pitcher,
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infraro axillary, Bankart type lesion.
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Let's move on to another one, shall we?
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