Interactive Transcript
0:01
20-year-old male, baseball pitcher, who recently dislocated,
0:07
and he's got an anteromedial pattern of bone injury,
0:11
mostly intramedullary involving anchondral or spongy bone.
0:16
The sagittal projection shows the anterior
0:18
location, which is typical of a reverse Hill Sachs
0:22
equivalent, or posterior dislocation event.
0:26
So now we're working out the back.
0:29
We have an axial gradient echo in the
0:30
middle, a PD, fat suppression on the left,
0:33
and a T2, fat suppression on the right.
0:37
We're pretty much done with the sagittal, um, unless
0:40
we had a bunch of paralabral cysts, which we don't,
0:43
but we do see the extent of inflammation up and down,
0:47
and typically, the frequency of posterior caudal labral
0:51
tears in posterior dislocation is greater than the
0:55
ones that are mid to superior, as you would expect.
0:58
Similar to anteroinferior labral
1:01
tears that occur in the front.
1:04
And the order of things is an injury to the labrum, then
1:08
the capsule, then the muscular tissues, and the periosteum
1:12
together, or the periosteum and then the muscular tissues.
1:15
So there is kind of an orderly progression of things.
1:18
If we look at the posterior labrum for a moment,
1:22
there are some striated, very scant, lacy signals.
1:25
In the labrum, there is a partial separation
1:29
of the labrum, but hanging on right there is a
1:34
portion of the labrum attached to the periosteum.
1:37
So you have maybe just a little bit of periosteal
1:40
elevation, hardly any, very little labral displacement,
1:44
and no detachment of the capsule from the point of
1:49
the labrum, nor is there injury of the posterior cuff.
1:53
Which can also happen with dramatic dislocations.
1:56
Or the anterior cuff, which can
1:58
happen with dramatic dislocations.
2:00
So we would refer to this as a reverse Perthes lesion.
2:04
It's a minimal labral tear.
2:06
It is a non-surgical labral tear.
2:08
And we like not to repair the tears
2:11
in the back if we don't have to.
2:13
Because they, they're, they're pretty vascular areas.
2:16
They have a good propensity for
2:17
granulating in because of this vascularity.
2:20
And, and healing on their own.
2:23
Now the rest of the pulsing sequences really
2:26
don't add a tremendous amount additionally.
2:29
Uh, the axial does demonstrate, by the way, the
2:31
intact periosteum, the intact musculature, the
2:34
intact remaining capsule, the intact posterior
2:38
rotator cuff, and this should all be part of The T1
2:43
weighted image shows again the anteromedial component
2:46
of the bancard, and perhaps shows it as a little
2:50
more severe than you otherwise might have expected.
2:54
This is an example of an acute unidirectional event
2:58
in a young man with a resultant Perthes type lesion,
3:02
which we said when we discussed it anteriorly in another
3:06
vignette, That can occur as a result of multidirectional
3:10
instability, micro-instability, unidirectional micro
3:14
instability, or a single traumatic dislocation event.
3:19
So it's got a lot of, a lot of
3:21
variability in its presentation.
3:24
Posterior dislocation of the shoulder.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.