Interactive Transcript
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This middle-aged woman was working in a nursing facility
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and one of the residents there jerked her arm downwards.
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And now she's got pain in the
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shoulder extending to the elbow.
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Now typically pain in the shoulder extending
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to the elbow is a sign for me that the
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patient potentially has adhesive capsulitis.
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They frequently get contraction of the
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shoulder from fibroinflammatory disease.
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And fluid then tracks into the biceps sheath.
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and creates a bicipital peritendinitis or tenosynovitis.
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That actually hasn't happened here, but in
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my experience, it's not uncommon for people
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that have antero infero axillary abnormalities
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to get referred pain down into the elbow.
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And sometimes that occurs because you've injured the
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inferior capsule, say down in here, fluid extravasates
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down, let me just draw it, fluid extravasates down,
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and what's in the neighborhood as you come forward.
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The, the nerves, the quadrilateral space.
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I don't know if that's the answer here, but there is a
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fair amount of swelling inferiorly on the axial image.
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So let's scroll the axial image, and I've given
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you three images, a simple T1 anatomy image
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for bone, an axial water-weighted GRE, and a
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coronal proton density fat suppression image.
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So let's scroll the axial first, and as we
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move from top, there's the biceps anchor.
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To bottom, we're in the mid-portion.
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There's the MGHL, middle glenohumeral ligament.
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There's a fissure separating our labrum from the bone.
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Is it a fissure?
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Is it tear?
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It should close down as we go down, and it does.
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It should get bigger and better and
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blacker than the posterior labrum.
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It should be triangular in shape.
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Sometimes they can be a little rounded at their tip.
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Sometimes they can be a little frayed
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along their free lateral margin.
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This one is, I don't mind that.
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I don't mind that little fissure right
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there, it's too small to bother me.
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And so, I'm unimpressed with the
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anteroinferior axillary labrum.
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And I feel good about this case, I'm wiping my
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hands clean and I'm ready to go home, right?
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Let's look at the posterior labrum for a moment.
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The posterior capsule should come
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off the tip of the posterior labrum.
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Is it?
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It's not, there's a small area of
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separation and the periosteum is elevated.
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So this patient has an ellipse, sorry, a polypsa,
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a posterior labrum intact, posterior labrum
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is intact, capsuloperiosteal sleeve avulsion.
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Very common in individuals that are physically active,
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especially those involved in pushing activities.
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In other vignettes, you've seen reverse Perthes lesions.
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Or Kim's lesions.
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But that's not why we're here.
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That's a distractor.
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That's just telling us we've got
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multidirectional instability.
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But perhaps we have multidirectional instability with
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macro instability with one geography predominating.
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And which geography is it?
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Anteroinferior.
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Let's look at our coronal projection.
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Let's put up all three coronals.
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Our T2, in the middle, which gives us perhaps our
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best ligamentous to surrounding tissue evaluation,
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our sensitive proton density fat suppression,
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and our T1 on the left, our anatomy image.
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Now our anatomy image just shows a
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glom, a glop, a mass of gray signal.
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It doesn't really sort out the
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characteristics of the anatomy.
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But our T2 weighted image, It does so pretty well.
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It shows us a curly Q structure that has a J shape
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right there that does not attach to the humeral neck.
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Or at least it doesn't appear to.
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Let's scroll it on the sensitive PD spur.
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Let's go to the back.
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Not very well attached.
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So there is a posterior inferior
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glenohumeral ligament detachment.
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Let's go to the middle.
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It's certainly swollen.
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Let's go anterior.
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It is barely attached.
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So, this is an example of somebody with a Hagel.
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From anterior to posterior.
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That is probably just a little bit of granulation tissue.
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that is trying to hold this structure in place.
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It's corrugated, it's crimped, it's clearly not taut.
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The patient has a humeral avulsion of the
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glenohumeral ligament from the humeral neck.
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Now there are several variations of this.
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This can occur isolated only in the back.
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When that occurs, it's called a raggle, or an R haggle.
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When it occurs in the middle,
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it's called an axillary haggle.
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When it occurs in the front, it's called a haggle.
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When it occurs with a piece of bone,
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it's called a behagel or a bagel.
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When it occurs on the humeral side, and it also
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takes off the glenoid side, but leaves the labrum on.
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It's called a floating IGHL or an IGLE.
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Now let's, let's attack the labral ligamentous complex.
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Is it normal?
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No.
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Is it retracted?
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No.
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But where the labrum should be, it's awfully swollen.
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So that inferior force, that downward and anterior
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force that's been applied to this shoulder has
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resulted in a strain/sprain/swelling
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of the labrum And detachment of the inferior
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glenohumeral ligament, the posterior band for sure,
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the anterior band is for sure, the axillary band is
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injured, there's swelling in this area right here.
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Sometimes when you have a Hagel, this little pouch
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right here can get bigger and bigger and bigger.
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And then that pouch is confused
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for a mass, a recess, a ganglion.
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Especially if you do an arthrogram.
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This pouch is going to distend, and distend,
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and distend, and it may even completely pull
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away and allow your arthrographic material
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to extravasate down into the axillary space.
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Hagel lesions, in general, are more likely to
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be identified when you get them acutely because
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they have a strong tendency to reattach and to
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scar down, and then you end up missing them.
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When you distend the joint, you are highly
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likely to form this pseudo pouch and
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sometimes get extravasation through the pouch.
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If this pouch gets really big and really scarred,
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it may encroach on the quadrilateral space.
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The quadrilateral space being the
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space between the teres and the psoas.
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Minor, the teres, major, the humerus, and the triceps.
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So this is your quadrilateral space right here.
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It is not encroached upon, but
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it contains the axillary nerve.
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So big, chronic Hagels with pseudopouched distention
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can result in quadrilateral space syndrome.
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So this concludes our discussion of the Hagel lesion.
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The sagittal projection really doesn't add very much.
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And by the way, do we have a Hill-Sachs lesion?
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Let's look at the sagittal just to be sure.
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I'll blow it up a little bit just to be consistent.
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And the answer is no.
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We do not have a Hill-Sachs lesion.
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And it's not uncommon for Hagels and their
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related entities, B Hagels, R Hagels, Rag
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Ragels, not to have Hill-Sachs lesions.
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Diagnosis, Hagel lesion.
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or humeral avulsion of the
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glenohumeral ligament, without bone.
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