Interactive Transcript
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Okay, this is a 17-year-old boy who's had
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a known dislocation, and we're going
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to attack this as an instability case.
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And we're going to break down instability, as you know,
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into single-event macro instability, repetitive micro,
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or repetitive macro instability, in which somebody
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repeatedly dislocates on top of a subtly unstable
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shoulder, and then we've got patients that have pure micro
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instability, that is frequently multidirectional.
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Now, usually when there's been a collision event, it's
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usually a unidirectional type of macro instability.
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And when we say macro instability, we
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mean dislocation, and/or locking.
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And that dislocation can be proven by
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an X-ray, a physical exam, or an MRI.
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So let's start out briefly with the coronal projection,
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because that's what most of you are going to put up first.
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And once you see the coronal projection, and you see
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something like this, even though it's not a flat-out
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fracture, it's more of a micro-trabecular injury,
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you don't see real depression, you don't see a
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what I call a V-shaped hatchet sign, that is still a
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very reliable sign that the patient has dislocated.
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It's very hard to get a garden-variety
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non-dislocation fracture over here.
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Right?
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You can't really get slammed from the top
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because you've got the acromion in the way.
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So there's not another mechanism for this to occur.
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It's kind of like the pivot shift injuries of an ACL.
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You know, once you have those, uh, first of all, they're
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hard to get any other way, and second, once you have them,
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the likelihood that your ACL has good integrity is very low.
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How low?
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5%, 3%, 1%, depends upon who you read.
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The same thing is true here.
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The chances of you having a normal
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antero-infraoxillary space for the labral
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ligamentous complex is close to zero.
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Now that doesn't mean you have a bankruptcy.
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You could have any one of a number of
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lesions, including a capsular injury.
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But there's going to be something wrong
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down here automatically, and if you
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don't read it, you're going to be wrong.
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So the first thing we've established is that
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there's a bone injury, what we call a Hill
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Sachs equivalent, and it's close to the apex.
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It's close to the 12 o'clock position on the humeral head.
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And then drifts off with a little
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bit of edema towards the side.
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Now, it is true that the more violent, the more
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depressed, and the broader the Hill Sachs, the more
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violent the dislocation and the more likely you
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are to have an anteroinferior higher grade lesion.
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So you want to assess that Hill Sachs
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for its severity, especially its length.
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Now, how do we assess length?
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We probably do it with circumference.
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Now, please don't confuse this normal flattening
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of the posterior humeral head with the Hill Sachs.
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That's too low.
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The Hill Sachs is up higher.
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Here's our Hill Sachs here, and
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here's our flattening down here.
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So let's go up to our Hill Sachs, and let's
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get the biggest area of Hill Sachs involvement.
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And I would say that it's about here.
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And if we wanted to, we could measure that.
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We're not going to do it right now.
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But we would give it a measurement, let's say,
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12 millimeters, 15 millimeters, or whatever.
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And, that would give us a rough idea, just in terms
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of sheer magnitude, of the size of the Hill Sachs.
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Now, the Hill Sachs lesions that I worry about
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are the ones that are 20, 25 millimeters.
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Or, I could take the circumference.
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I could take this circumference, make a best fit circle.
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And I'd say, okay, well that
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amount of the circle was involved.
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the circumference of the circle is involved.
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Now what's the prevalence of a Hill-Sachs?
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It actually increases from 25 percent in
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first-time dislocators, to probably
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80 to 90 percent in repeat dislocators.
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Most people that dislocate have dislocated before.
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Another caveat for Hill-Sachs lesions: they will
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increase in size with increasing numbers of dislocations.
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And eventually, they'll take on this,
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more hatchet-like appearance.
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So if you have a hatchet, the odds are
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it's not a single dislocation event.
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Now Hill-Sachs defects, by themselves, rarely
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require surgical treatment, unless they're
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large enough to cause severe injury,
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mechanical symptoms, or there's a bipolar lesion.
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In other words, you're missing part of the glenoid rim.
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In other words, you've chopped it off and
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you've got a bony fragment with medullary bone inside.
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That is not the case here.
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Larger lesions of the humeral head, though, even
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though they may not be associated with recurrent
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dislocation, they can be associated with a
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sensation of catching, or clicking, or popping.
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Another caveat.
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The closer the Hill-Sachs lesion is to the top of the humeral
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head, the more medial it is, and the closer it gets to the
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articular surface, the more problematic it's going to be.
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The more likely you are to get clicking and
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the more likely you are to get dislocation.
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So medialization of that Hill-Sachs,
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let's take a look at it again.
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It's right here at the 12 o'clock position, maybe 11:30.
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So as it gets more and more in this
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direction, it gets more problematic.
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Hill-Sachs lesions are also more problematic
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the more often the patient is in this position,
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the abduction external rotation position.
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If they don't get into this position that
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often, it's not as big a problem.
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So now let's have a look at our
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anteroinferior aspect of a labrum.
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Now we have said in some of our golden rules
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in other vignettes that as we go from the top
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to the bottom, the labrum should get big.
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It should get bad.
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In other words, it should get big and bad,
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and black, and triangular, and smooth.
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It should look something like this.
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And it should definitely be
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bigger than the posterior labrum.
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And it should definitely be
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bigger than the labrum at the top.
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Let's go back up to the top.
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There's a little weenie labrum, and
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our labrum doesn't get much bigger.
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It looks like a dark dot, with tissue running all the way
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through it, crossing the labrum, and crossing this little
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squiggle right here, which is the broken periosteum.
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in a moment, the labrum for the most part, at least
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anteriorly, doesn't medialize under the periosteum much.
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For if it did, if it medialized, or tumbled underneath this
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periosteum like this, here's the periosteum right there,
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periosteum would be on top of it, I'll make a line for it.
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Sorry, a little different color would be better.
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Then you would have an Alps Elysian, an
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Anterolabral Periosteal Sleeve Evulsion.
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Now sometimes that can happen anteriorly,
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sometimes that can happen in the axillary
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area, sometimes it can happen in both.
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So let's look at the axillary area.
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So here's our axillary area, here's our labrum.
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Our labrum has come off with the IGHL.
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So our IGHL is attached to the humeral neck.
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It's attached in the front.
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It's attached in the axilla, and it's attached in the back.
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If it wasn't attached, we would have
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some variation of humeral ligament.
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We don't have that.
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But unfortunately, this part of the labral ligamentous
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complex, labrum and ligament, have been yanked
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off, hacked off, pulled off, the inferior labrum.
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Is it medialized?
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Yeah, a little bit.
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Remember from one of our other vignettes, we said
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that the axis of the labrum should be about like this.
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that's relative to a vertical axis.
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And indeed, this one is almost straight up
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and down, and it's not in its proper position.
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It's just slightly shifted towards the medial side.
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Now another rule, another coronal rule, not applying
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to the superior labrum, but the inferior labrum, is,
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fissures, and dippity doos, and hyaline interposition.
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And signals here should never cross over to the dark side.
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What do I mean by that?
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It should never go all the way through.
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So they shouldn't go all the way through this way.
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And this one does, right?
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Right there.
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White signal going all the way through.
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So if you have a pure axillary labral
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lesion, you shouldn't see this.
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So, now we've established that we have a Hill-Sachs lesion.
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That we have a labral ligamentous tear.
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There's a little bit of medialization.
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Perhaps it involves a little bit of the periosteum.
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There's some fragmented periosteum.
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There may be a little periosteum pulled off, it's a
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little hard to tell, but there's not much medialization.
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So, this would be appropriately called a giant Bankart.
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Now in assessing, and this is basic stuff, we're
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assessing the Hill-Sachs for its size and position,
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we're assessing the Bankart for its position.
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Um, let's talk a little bit about the variations
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of a Bankart for a minute, and that leads me to
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bringing up all the axials that I have at my disposal.
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this one up, so we've got three of them.
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Let's see if we can scroll them together
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and get them all about the same size.
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And now let's take a look at our Bankart lesion.
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So, let's define a Bankart first.
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So I'm gonna draw over my glenoid.
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I'm gonna say this is my labrum, had it been here.
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And I'm going to give it a little bit of
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hyaline cartilage in blue for hyaline.
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The hyaline can slip under here.
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Sometimes it's a transition,
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sometimes it's an abrupt transition.
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It just stops and the labrum starts.
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So for me to have a Bankart, I want to have a
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tear that goes through and through the labrum.
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So I'm going to use something like light purple.
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I want it to go through and through
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the labrum and out the other side.
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Or, I want my Bankart lesion to go through and
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through the labrum and then out the periosteum.
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And by the way, I'll use the same color,
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but the periosteum would be over here.
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So I've either broken the periosteum or broken the labrum.
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That is a classic soft Bankart.
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Now, one caveat or pitfall.
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It is not uncommon in people that have acute dislocations,
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superimposed on chronic dislocations to have
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the anterior aspect of the glenoid ground down.
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So, in other words, what I mean by that
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is, it's a little more rounded, like this.
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Now, your immediate thought is,
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okay, there must be a bony Bankart.
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For there to be a bony Bankart, you
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must see a fragment that has detached.
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And we'll make it a little thicker
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so we can see it a little better.
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A fragment that's detached.
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That is filled with bone marrow, or has some marrow in it.
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Because you can simply grind this
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down, and lose some glenoid bone stock.
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And we're going to talk about the loss of that
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glenoid bone stock in a separate vignette.
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My goal here is to just illustrate a
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simple Hill Sachs and a simple Bankart.
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So we've defined a Bankart.
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A Bankart is a through and through labral
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tear, or a through and through tear that
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involves the labrum, and the periosteum.
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You'll see that there is an opportunity to subcategorize,
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uh, Bankart lesions and lesions that stand in for Bankart
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lesions and we're going to do that in separate vignettes.
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And then we've talked about Hill Sachs and I'd
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like to go back to the Hill Sachs for a minute.
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We said size matters, depth matters, location matters.
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Remember that Hill Sachs fractures are not always fractures.
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They may be micro trabecular injuries.
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They may be contusions.
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They may be intramedullary and chondral bone, spongy
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bone fractures, many of which you can't see on x-ray.
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Now one last caveat, before we move on to another case.
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And that is, what are the associated lesions around a soft Bankart?
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And they include the following.
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If you have involvement of the capsule, and
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the capsule is detached from the labrum.
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Now this capsule is injured.
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It's a little bit irregular and rounded.
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You can look at some of the other images nearby.
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This is a gradient echo to the left, probably.
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And another water-weighted image on the right.
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When you look at the capsular tissues, if
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they start to come undone, this one hasn't.
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It's right on top of the labrum.
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But if it starts to pull away from the labrum,
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then you would say, "Okay, I've got a double lesion."
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So if that pulled away from that, right now I
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just have the labrum separated from the glenoid.
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What if I had the periosteum stripped all the way off?
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I do have a little periosteal stripping.
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Then I would add to that and I'd say I have a triple lesion.
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So, periosteum to labrum and glenoid.
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Capsule to labrum.
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Labrum to bone.
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This is how I want you to think
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about soft Bankart lesions.
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And then finally, you're gonna make sure you don't have
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glenoid bone loss as either remodeling from a current
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dislocation or a flat-out fracture with fragments seen.
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And by the way, if you have a
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fragment, the fragment can resorb.
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If you're not sure, if you're new, you're a resident, you're
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a fellow, you're young, and you haven't done a lot of MRI,
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don't be ashamed, get a CT, look for the bone fragment.
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