Interactive Transcript
0:00
We're focusing on all six components
0:02
of the rotator cuff,
0:04
and we're moving now into the sagittal
0:06
projection and how to use it.
0:08
Let me do a little drawing for you first.
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You know, as you move from medial to lateral,
0:14
and I'll make a...
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I'll make a humeral head that's in pink.
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And let's pretend we're about over here.
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We're about at this location.
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At that location,
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you're going to see a fair amount of muscular tissue.
0:29
And the reason you don't see any muscular tissue
0:31
here is because the cuff is ruptured.
0:33
So, don't be worried that you don't see it coronally.
0:36
But in a normal shoulder,
0:37
you'll see some muscular tissue,
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which I'll make orange.
0:40
And then within that muscular tissue,
0:43
which will include several different muscles,
0:46
the supraspinatus and infraspinatus,
0:49
you're going to see some individual tendon subunits.
0:54
Now as we get a little further over,
0:57
and I'll show you where we are.
1:00
We're going to pretend we're over here,
1:02
then things look a lot different.
1:04
So now we'll make a humeral head.
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What does it look like now?
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Now, things flatten out and they become much darker.
1:13
You may see multiple round spots near each other,
1:17
or they may be one contiguous black band.
1:21
And then you'll often see a little bit
1:24
of lighter signal right there.
1:25
Usually in the posterior one third or
1:28
middle third of the humeral head.
1:30
And that signifies that you're making the
1:33
leap or transition to the infraspinatus,
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even though we all know now that there's quite a bit
1:39
of interweaving and interdigitation between
1:41
the fibers of these two structures.
1:44
So we'll make our infraspinatus in purple.
1:47
And because it has a steeper radius of curvature,
1:51
it often looks a little more like little
1:53
hairs coming in than the supraspinatus,
1:56
which looks more like a flat black structure.
2:01
And we have discussed this previously in some of our vignettes.
2:05
So now, let's go to our sagittal.
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So, let's reinvent ourselves here.
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And you can see from my line that this sagittal is
2:14
out near the periphery or a far
2:17
edge of the humeral head.
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And to quote a famous author,
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"Where is the beef?"
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There is no beef.
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There's no supraspinatus,
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just a ragged fiber remnant that's lying in a hole.
2:33
There's no infraspinatus.
2:35
There is a sick, swollen teres
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and there are some sick irregular
2:41
looking infraspinatus fibers.
2:43
We've got a bald humeral head.
2:45
And I've got on the right side,
2:47
the T1-weighted image to match it.
2:50
Now, one potential pitfall that you've got to be very
2:54
cognizant of
2:56
is the underbelly or undersurface of the deltoid.
3:00
Sometimes you'll see a little bit of coalescence
3:04
of the tendon. Not in this example,
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but if the deltoid is sagging down or
3:10
sitting down on the humeral head,
3:13
you're actually looking at that tendon and
3:15
you will confuse it for an intact cuff.
3:17
It happens all the time,
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so don't get fooled by that.
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But let's continue scrolling now.
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We'll go out to the side. We've got nothing.
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A little bit of teres.
3:30
We start working our way medially,
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we still got nothing.
3:33
We still got nothing.
3:35
And we should be running into the biceps about now,
3:37
and we do.
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Right there.
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There's our biceps. Let's follow our biceps in.
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There goes our biceps. So our biceps is present.
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It's accounted for.
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But although you don't know this from this vignette,
3:50
it's also subluxed.
3:51
But that's a story for a different vignette.
3:55
There is the coracohumeral ligament,
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one component of it.
4:00
The intraarticular component,
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in another vignette,
4:05
you would have seen that the extraarticular
4:06
component is already ruptured.
4:08
But I'm showing it for the supraspinatus,
4:11
which is nowhere to be found.
4:13
The infraspinatus,
4:14
which is also nowhere to be found.
4:17
And finally, the subscapularis,
4:19
which is found.
4:20
There is the robust,
4:22
superficial portion of the subscap,
4:24
but the deeper fibers of the subscap.
4:27
Let me blow it up a little bit.
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These deeper fibers here
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and these deeper fibers right here,
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which should be flush on the lesser tuberosity,
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and they're not.
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They're replaced by inflammatory
4:42
fibrous tissue and/or scar.
4:45
You see directly above it,
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the position of the biceps.
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So have firmly established that the supraspinatus
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is ruptured all the way from front to back,
4:58
all the way from anterior to posterior.
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See if I can blow it up for you rather quickly.
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Well, there we go.
5:08
So all the way from anterior to posterior,
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it's torn. So it's a complete tear.
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Completeness is length.
5:17
The infraspinatus is torn.
5:18
All the way from anterior to posterior,
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it's a complete tear.
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And the subscapularis is demonstrating a
5:25
partial thickness under surface tear.
5:29
The sagittal invaluable in telling you the front
5:32
to back length of tears and in identifying
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and qualifying subscapularis tears.
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