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69 Year Old Male with Complex Pattern of Injury

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69-year-old with a complex pattern of injuries,

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which you have seen in another vignette.

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The rotator cuff is just destroyed.

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Every component of it is gone.

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The supraspinatus is gone.

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The anterior fibers of the infraspinatus are gone.

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These are shards and shreds of the rotator cuff with blood.

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The humeral head has lost its depressor mechanism.

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It's elevated, and the patient also has an

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injury, a high-grade tear of the subscapularis.

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Here are some subscapularis fibers present, but as

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you know, the subscapularis is a sheet, so we're

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missing lots of fibers here, and the reason that's

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relevant is subscapularis tears go with, like soup

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and sandwich, like Vegemite and toast, they go

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with infraaxillary labral ligamentous injuries.

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So you've always got to go back and forth looking

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for this complex that frequently is found together.

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Now I'll give you the arthritis, I'll give you the

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decentered upward position of the humeral head, I'll

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give you the pseudocyst, I'll give you the pitting

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of the humeral head, but I won't give you the infra

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axillary portion of the glenohumeral ligament.

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The anterior band of the IGHL and

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the posterior band of the IGHL.

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So the IGHL comes off like this.

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Comes off, and then it inserts on the humeral neck.

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And it blends with the labrum, which is

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this black or dark gray object, which I will

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make, well, I'll make it orange right here.

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So here's our orange labrum, and that's why

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we call this the labroligamentous complex.

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Now, look over here on the T2-weighted image.

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Where is our glenoid side of our labrum?

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Inferoaxillary anterior band and posterior

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band of the glenohumeral ligament.

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No, it's not over here.

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It's over here.

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It should be over here.

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It's medial to the labrum.

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So, this is a glenohumeral avulsion of the

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glenohumeral ligament or a Hagglund lesion.

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But I'd like to show it for another reason.

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And that reason is I want to show

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you what's happening in the back.

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You can see the posterior fibers of the

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glenohumeral ligament on the PD and the T2 attached.

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Although they are a little swollen and

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gray on the T2, they're very gray on the

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center fat-weighted, T1-weighted image.

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That's back.

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Now let's go forward.

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And as we go forward, we see it's a little

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stretched out, but present and swollen.

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Let's go forward just a little more.

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We're still posterior, by the way.

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Look at the acromion.

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And now things are getting a little bit messy.

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We don't see a nice, clean line between,

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say, that structure and that structure.

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It's breaking up.

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And that's because we've got a tear back here, posteriorly.

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And that's why we would refer to this as a form frustum or

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a minor manifestation of a reverse, sorry, of a reverse

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humeral avulsion of the glenohumeral ligament, also

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known as an R haggle, also known as a raggle or a raggle.

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Then as we go forward to the anterior band, that

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is where you'd have your conventional Hagglund.

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And let's have a look at that.

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So here is our glenoid side of the glenohumeral

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ligament, which should be coming off over here.

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Now, where is our humeral side?

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Now, all the way in the front, we

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see the humeral side very nicely.

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Actually, I take that back.

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In the middle, in the axillary

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region, dead center, we see it nicely.

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Let's go all the way forward.

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All the way forward, whoa, it's gone.

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So, the anterior attachment on the humeral neck is gone.

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The posterior attachment on the humeral neck is injured.

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And if that weren't insult enough,

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so this would be a classic Hagglund.

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The one in the back would be a Regal, which I've

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already showed you, or a form frustum of a Regal.

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If that wasn't bad enough, we've torn the middle

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of the axillary band of the IGHL right there.

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Here's one band of it, here.

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Here's the other band of it, here.

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And here's the hole, right there,

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where the fluid is seeping out.

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This is creating a rather large pouch.

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Let me draw over the pouch with a different color.

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Let me pick, uh, yellow looks nice.

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So here is our pouch that's broken.

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You can see it's squiggling all the way immediately.

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Now let me take it away.

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There's the pouch right there with

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an opening in it because it's torn.

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And that pouch is sticking down and encroaching on

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the brachial plexus, which is a potential problem.

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Another potential site of encroachment that From this large

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pseudo mass of fluid, this sort of false pouch, which is

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often walled off by scar tissue, is the quadrilateral space.

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So let's go to the front, and how

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do we know we're in the front?

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We find the coracoid, we get oriented, now we scroll

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backwards, and we find the Terry's major, sorry, Terry's

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major and minor, and between those two is going to be

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The neurovascular bundle of the quadrilateral space,

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which is also bounded by the triceps and the humerus.

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So the quadrilateral space right here, humerus lateral,

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triceps medial, the teres minor upper border, the teres

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major lower border, and that space is spared in this

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patient with a very complex infraroaxillary injury.

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Remembering, That's subscapularis and middle

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lenihumeral ligament injuries commonly accompany

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these complex infraroaxillary injuries.

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So now let's do a quick summary.

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We're going to have an IGHL with an anterior

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band, a posterior band, and an axillary band.

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When we have an injury to the attachment of the

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humeral neck, Mid to anterior, we call that a humeral

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avulsion of the glenohumeral ligament, or a Hagglund.

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If it takes a piece of bone with it, usually a small piece,

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but we did show you a big piece in one of the vignettes,

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then it is a B Hagglund, or a bony Hagglund, or a bagel.

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If it takes both sides, the humeral neck and

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the glenoid side, then the whole thing floats.

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So you have a floating glenohumeral ligament just sitting

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there with no attachment on either side, the so-called

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floating IGHL, or anterior inferior glenohumeral ligament.

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Glenohumeral ligament tear.

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Then we've got the same thing happening

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in the back at the humeral neck.

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Some of the fibers may stay on, or the whole

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thing may come off, but it's posterior.

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We call that a reverse Hagglund, or reverse

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humeral avulsion of the glenohumeral ligament.

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If we've got a tear away from the labrum on the

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glenoid side, and the labrum stays on, this is a

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formal or classic type of Hagglund, or Hagglund Hagglund.

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Glenohumeral avulsion of the glenohumeral ligament.

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This portion of the ligament from the glenoid

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side may sit lateral to the labrum, or, as in

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the case you just saw, medial to the labrum.

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Then you've got an axillary mid-portion tear.

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We had one of those.

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And then this pouch can start to migrate and

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fill up all over the place and get into the

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brachial plexus in the quadrilateral space.

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You could simply have a sprain with scar tissue

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which may simulate Adhesive capsulitis, but it

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usually occurs in young, athletic individuals, and

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that scar can contract and produce a pseudomass.

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That's our summary for infraro

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axillary labral ligamentous injuries.

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Trauma

Shoulder

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Bone & Soft Tissues

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