Interactive Transcript
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Okay, let's look at a 20 year old man
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with recurrent dislocation.
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He's got multidirectional instability preceding
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a bout of acute traumatic instability.
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People with multidirectional instability, laxity,
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and repeated bouts of subluxation and dislocation
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are frequently referred to as atraumatic
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onset of multidirectional instability, or AMBRI.
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And those patients As long as they don't come out
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violently on a repetitive basis, can be treated
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conservatively, and don't need major surgical procedures.
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Whereas the traumatic unidirectional event, or traumatic
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unidirectional instability, so called TUI, is a different
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animal, but then you get the scenario where you get both.
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The patient has multidirectional instability, Uh,
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atraumatic, or they have traumatic multidirectional
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instability, and then it becomes a repetitive process,
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so called variants of AMBRI, and then on top of that you
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substitute, or you include TUI, traumatic unidirectional
1:09
instability, or acute traumatic dislocation event.
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That's what's happened here.
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Patient dislocated a while ago, had
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multidirectional instability for a while,
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repeated bouts of subluxation, and then BAM, the
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patient has a collision event, and they're out.
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Let's look at what has happened.
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On the far left, axial gradient echo image.
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The Hillsax lesion is large.
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Let's go ridge to ridge, or you could go
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ridge to medial border of rotator cuff.
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I personally find it easier just to find
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the free edges of the ridge, measure it.
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And this one is just a little over 20 millimeters.
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Maybe 21, 22 millimeters.
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Then we go over to our sagittal.
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And we have made a best fit circle.
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Instead of me hand drawing it,
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I've let the computer draw it.
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I've gotten the diameter of that best fit circle, big D.
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I've multiplied that by 83.
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bone loss, which was about 4 millimeters.
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So, big D times 83 minus this little d right
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here, came out to about 19 or 20 millimeters.
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So I had about a 20 little over
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20 millimeter Hill-Sachs lesion.
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I've got a 19 to 20 millimeter, uh, calculation
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for my glenoid bone loss and absolute values.
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So using the on track off track anatomic
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measurement technique, uh, we're kind
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of borderline as to where we stand.
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Now let me make a few other points.
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Okay.
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One thing we haven't talked about
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is the height of the Hill-Sachs.
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I get much more concerned when I have a Hill-Sachs
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that goes above the 3 o'clock position or equator.
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And this time I do.
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And I should have a nice quartered circle.
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I mean, where is my circle here, here, here, here, here?
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I'm way up high.
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So those patients are also at higher risk for repeated
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dislocation when they're borderline off track, on track.
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In other words, this measurement and the measurement I just
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gave you were kind of equal, they're about 20 millimeters.
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But when I have other factors, like a severe capsular
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injury, and a very high extent of my glenoid bone loss
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lesion, then I'm more apt to recommend or to support,
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uh, other techniques for improving, uh, stability.
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Now, there are other methods of measurement.
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Another method would be to measure the radius.
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Use the radius technique and see how much glenoid
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bone loss we have, focusing mainly on the glenoid
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bone loss and how much bone stock we really need.
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So I would take a dot in the middle, and um, I
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can make that dot with my, my little pen here.
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So here's my dot right in the center of the glenoid.
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Using a best fit circle, which I'm not going to draw again.
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And then I take my radius to the back cortex.
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And then I take my radius to the front cortex.
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And normally those should be equal, right?
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Because your dot should be right in the middle.
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But it just so happens, That we have lost 20
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percent of this length compared to that length.
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That's just a simple way to explain it.
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So when we say we've lost 20 percent of the
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radius in the front compared to the back, we
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then go to what's called the Knopfsinger table,
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which you can Google and put on your desk.
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And that would tell us that we have, in terms of
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area, less than 10 to 5 percent overall area loss.
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So that suggests that it's not so bad.
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So you can see how you've got to kind of
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put this together like you're baking a cake.
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Because you know what?
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That one I'm going to set aside.
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And the reason I'm setting it
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aside, my Hill-Sachs is really big.
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My glenoid bone loss is really tall.
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And my on track, off track, anatomic
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measurements are virtually equal.
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And then, now I'm going to look at the actual track.
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of the humerus.
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Look at that track.
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Here's my depression, and I've told you
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in the past that the track runs from
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supralateral to inframedial, kind of like this.
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Let's see what our track looks like.
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And that's exactly what it's doing, isn't it?
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It's going from supralateral to inframedial.
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That is a typical humeral glenoid bone track.
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Now you might ask yourself, Why are the Hill-Sachs lesions
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so much more consistent than the glenoid lesions?
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They're much more variable, and they're, they're honestly
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the bone lesions in the glenoid, not the soft tissue ones.
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But the bone lesions are less
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frequent than the humeral lesions.
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But aren't they both bone?
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Why, why, why don't you get them with the same frequency?
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And the answer is simple.
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Softer bone.
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Whereas on the glenoid side, first of all it's
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pointed, So it has the potential of just ramming
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right into the humerus and secondly, it's harder bone.
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There's more corticated bone there and less spongy bone.
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So this is softer, explaining why the Hill-Sachs
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lesions are more frequent, deeper, and more prominent.
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Oh, we're not done yet.
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We'd like to be done, but let's bring down our other axial.
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And I'm going to blow that one up just so we
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have some size and symmetry and some beauty.
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Wow.
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Look at that.
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Hill-Sachs.
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This is a PD spur and this is a gradient echo.
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They're very similar looking.
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One is great for bone.
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The other not let's get them about the same size.
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That's one big, deep Hill-Sachs.
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Easy to get the length once again.
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And let's scroll and focus on the labrum.
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So let's go up high where we have a more
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decent looking, um, Labral ligament is complex.
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Here's our superior glenohumeral ligament.
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There's our rotator interval.
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And now let's work our way down, where by
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rule of law, that we have established, yes,
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we are the law, we're the sheriff in town.
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We're coming down, down, we see the MGHL, the
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subscapularis, and our labrum, by law, should be
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getting bigger, and blacker, and more triangular.
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And what's happening to it?
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It's turning into a wiener dog.
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It's disappearing.
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It's getting smaller and smaller and smaller.
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Now, is it over here, medialized, like an absolution?
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No, it's not.
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Where did it go?
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It could be autodigested.
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Well, that would take some time.
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But he is a repeated dislocator.
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So that's a possibility.
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Another possibility is it's just simply pulverized
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into morass of edematous, bloody tissue.
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Yes, the labrum can become edematous,
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so let's keep looking at it.
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And while we're at it, let's look
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at the surrounding capsular tissue.
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And here are some shards of labrum, these little
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black structures right there, and that's our capsule.
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Now typically, our labrum should look something like this.
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Here's our glenoid, here's our labrum, and
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then our capsule should have some linearity,
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some consistent linearity touching the labrum.
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That's our capsule right there.
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It's a, a fluffy ball.
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It's not linear.
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So the capsule and the pulverized labrum are no more.
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They're separated.
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They're distorted.
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But that's not all.
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Let's take a look at our periosteum.
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We have periosteal bleeding.
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We have periosteal separation or detachment.
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So we have a ligamentous to shards of labrum injury.
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We have a labrum to bony injury, and we have
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a periosteal injury to labral injury with
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periosteal separation, a so-called triple lesion.
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So this is an example of somebody that is
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borderline on track, off track, but more likely
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off track, Given the height of the glenoid lesion.
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We've given you two methods for measurement.
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Absolute measurements.
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We've shown you how to measure
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the radius of glenoid bone loss.
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And translate that into the Knopfsinger scale.
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Which you might put on your table while you're reading out.
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And we've shown you the nasty, heinous,
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triple lesion that this patient has sustained.
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Oh no, we're not done.
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This is a muscular young boy, young man.
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He's not a boy, he's a young man.
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And he's got lots of muscles, which means he weight lifts.
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And when they weight lift, what do they do?
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They do this.
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And they do this.
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So they can look good from the front.
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Well, that's not a good idea unless you
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try and look good from the back too.
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You want to be balanced.
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So it's important physiologically as well as aesthetically.
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And here's our axial, and what's
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going on in our posterior labrum?
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We've got a tiny little lesion
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that works its way out the back.
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And you might call this a reverse Perthes lesion.
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If it's really small, sometimes
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we'll use the term Kim's lesion.
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So this is a repetitive micro
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instability lesion from weightlifting.
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And that is the final finding in this case.
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