Interactive Transcript
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I'd like to introduce the concept of on track and
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off track shoulder imaging in unstable shoulders.
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And I'd like to start out with this basic diagram
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of the humerus sitting on the glenoid cup.
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The anterior glenoid cup is truncated,
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and we are at the N range of stability.
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I'll explain what I mean by that.
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So the capsuloligamentous structures, especially the
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capsule and inferior glenohumeral ligament, are the main
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stabilizers with the arm in the end range of movement.
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So when your arm is in this position, the so called
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Hebert position or behind the head, an abduction,
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an external rotation with the elbow up, this is the
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position that makes the green capsule here taut and
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prevents the shoulder from being displaced anteriorly.
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Now there are other helpers that stabilize,
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including the shape of the glenoid cup, the
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depth of the cup, for if the cup is flat.
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You know, you're less likely to
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keep the humeral head in place.
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If the cup is too deep, then you
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could have diminished range of motion.
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There are two types of glenoid bone loss.
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There's glenoid bone loss from wear, from
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being ground down, from repetitive dislocation.
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And that will often look something like this.
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It'll be a little more rounded and a little more subtle.
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Then there's glenoid bone loss
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that is in the form of a fragment.
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That's usually pretty serrated.
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And then you actually will see the fragment.
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Often with medullary bone with high T1 signal inside it.
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Now four out of every five patients that are actual
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dislocators have both a Hill Sachs and a Bankert lesion.
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And this is known as a bipolar lesion.
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And when the arm is in this, this end range of motion or
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movement, which I have displayed for you, for you here.
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And there are varying degrees of abduction
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and external rotation from patient to
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patient, depending upon their sport.
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the glenoid with the humeral head.
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And this contact zone is known as the glenoid track.
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Now, the contact zone is usually between the mid and
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posterior humerus, articular surface, and the glenoid.
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Now, a Hill Sachs lesion that stays on this track, so that
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there's continuous articular contact, so called glenoid.
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on track lesion, cannot get stuck on or engage
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with the glenoid and cause a dislocation.
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I'll explain what I mean by that in a subsequent diagram,
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since many of you may not be able to conceptualize this.
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I'm gonna, I'm gonna I'm going to keep it simple,
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but that's just an introduction for right now.
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On the other hand, if you have a Hill Sachs lesion,
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which is off the glenoid track, this has a high risk of
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engagement, in other words, getting stuck and dislocation.
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I probably can draw it pretty simply.
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If I come out of this position, this, this extreme
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position, and I start to move my arm forward.
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What may happen is, I might have a defect in the humerus.
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And I'll just randomly draw a defect.
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I'm going to make my defect, um, green.
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So here's my defect.
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So my defect gets stuck on the anterior edge of the glenoid
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and it engages and as I continue to come out of my extreme
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position this entire humeral head will fulcrum forward
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basically be levered out of the glenoid by this defect.
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Remember, this is a triangular shaped defect, and
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the glenoid is kind of seated into it, like that.
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It'll be clear in a moment.
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Now here we have glenoid bone loss.
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But yet, we don't really have a defect
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here for the glenoid to prolapse into.
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And this is still a patient that is going to
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have an on track morphology, because there's
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always going to be articular contact, even though
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you've lost a fair amount of glenoid tissue.
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And we're going to teach you some different ways
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and methods to make that assessment in unipolar,
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And, but especially bipolar lesions, where you
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have both the glenoid abnormality and the humeral
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abnormality, which is 80 percent of all of them.
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Now this is clinically validated stuff.
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Um, I mean this concept that you can reliably predict
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somebody who's going to be a recurrent dislocator by
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looking at this engagement on track, off track phenomenon.
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is supported, clinically invalidated.
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Uh, it's important because for off track lesions,
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the treatment may, may have to be different.
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You may have to use bone blocks and grafts and
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capsulography and something called remplissage,
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which we'll define a little bit later on.
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And these procedures, in addition to a
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Bankert, or instead of a Bankert, may
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decrease your risk of recurrent dislocation.
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So, let's move on now to another simple demonstration
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of on track, off track morphology diagrammatically.
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