Interactive Transcript
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40-year-old, motor vehicle accident,
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irreducible dislocation.
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This case is not a secret.
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Axial T1-weighted, fat-weighted imaging, water
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weighted imaging, and T2 fat-suppressed sagittal
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imaging, showing the humerus dislocated posteriorly.
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Let's begin with our bone lesion, which is very extensive.
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It occupies almost half of the
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circumference of the humeral head.
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And typically, defects that involve up
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to 25 percent of the articular surface.
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and posterior dislocations can be treated with
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closed reduction if they're stable and acute.
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In other words, you get them within
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three weeks after dislocation.
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Or, if they're unstable and not reducible, then
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you have to go open and reduce them that way.
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If a small defect requires surgery, uh, to stabilize
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it and you have If you have injured the anterior
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mechanism, then you may have to use a subscapularis
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transfer to help additionally stabilize the bone.
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And in this case, the subscapularis
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is just completely pulverized.
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It's off, and this patient is going
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to require, uh, subscapularis repair.
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Now typically, defects that are 25-50 percent of the surface
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area, And this qualifies for that, are often treated with
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transfer of the lesser tuberosity, uh, into the defect.
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Patients with greater than 50 percent, uh, separation or 50
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percent diminished bone surface, those are patients that are
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going to get bone block transfers for further stabilization.
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In the back, the labrum, believe it or not, is still on.
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The capsule is this squiggly, wiggly line, no longer
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attached, so it is ruptured, it's buried right here.
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There's the, there's the edge of the,
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free edge of the capsule right there.
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This black structure is a central tendon
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of the rotator cuff, so let's be clear.
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Capsule, which should be coming
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back here, completely ripped off.
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This is just a small piece of tendon in the rotator
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cuff, and the rotator cuff stops right there.
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So it should be going all the way around back, it's not.
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The posterior rotator cuff structures are torn.
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There's another stump of the posterior
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cuff in the capsule in the back.
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There's a little bit of the anteroinferior IGHL.
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That's injured or torn.
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The subscapularis is torn.
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The biceps is also torn.
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So this is a, this is a massive
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injury with multiple problems.
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First, patient's not reducible.
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So we have to go open into the OR to reduce it.
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Second, we have to fix the subscapularis.
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Third, we have to figure out what to do with the biceps.
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Fourth, the anterior capsule is torn.
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Fifth, the posterior capsule is torn.
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Sixth, the posterior rotator cuff is torn.
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Seventh, the anterolateral humerus has
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a massive, a massive bone abnormality.
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It's actually A patient that's in,
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in internal rotation right now.
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So that's why the position is rather
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funny for a posterior, uh, dislocation.
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Actually, I apologize.
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He's externally rotated.
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So, that's why this defect is in such a funny position.
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I'm not sure of the mechanism of dislocation in this case.
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But, this is going to have to be dealt
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with, with either some type of subscapularis
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transfer, or a bone block graft into this area.
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Probably a remplissage, which is French
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for filling in, is not going to do it.
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And a remplissage would be sewing the torn
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infraspinatus into the defect, along with some capsule.
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We typically do that in simple anterior Hill
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Sachs lesions, but in posterior dislocations,
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this is a less commonly performed procedure.
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Massive dislocation.
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Locked in the dislocation position,
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going to require an open reduction.
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