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On-Track/Off-Track: The Hill-Sachs Concept

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So we have a diagram of a patient with a Hill Sachs

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lesion in the mid range position where the capsule,

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seen here in green, is lax, as it normally will be.

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And then with the patient in extreme abduction,

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external rotation, where the capsule is taut.

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And in neither of these cases is the

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shoulder unstable, despite the fact that

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we have a deep focal Hill Sachs lesion.

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Now the prevalence of Hill Sachs lesions is

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about 70 percent after initial dislocation.

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It's about 85 to 95 percent with recurrent dislocations.

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It may even be a little higher than that.

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The Hill Sax lesions Can't appreciate it here, but

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let's draw the greater tuberosity, and then this

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would be the medial humerus, and then the neck, so

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this would be, uh, lateral, and this would be medial.

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And if you were, you were to look at a Hillsack's

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lesion that is contentious, the contentious

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ones are usually more medially positioned.

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And they course from supralateral to

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inframedial, so they kind of look like this.

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They have this course to them.

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And you'll sometimes see that.

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on a coronal water weighted

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sequence on the posterior slices.

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And when you do see that in the medial quadrant

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of the humerus, you should be highly suspicious

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that you have an off track, gauging scenario.

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Now typically, most Tilsax lesions occur not right at

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the exact apex, but slightly off the apex, laterally.

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Anywhere from, say, 2 to 5 millimeters.

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But the actual range is more like 2

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to 24 millimeters off to the side.

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So, that's probably a pretty good set of numbers to use.

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But the more medialized the hillsacks The greater

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the hairs on the back of your neck should stand up.

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So, small Hill Sachs lesions on the medial side

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may be a lot more contentious than really big

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ones that are seen near the greater tuberosity.

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So this is something you have to be aware of on CT and MRI.

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The, the Hill Sachs lesion that we have here never engages.

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the capsule is lax, it never engages the point.

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of the glenoid.

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In other words, it's pretty much displaced away

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from the anterior margin of the glenoid cup, so

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there really isn't the opportunity for engagement.

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Now, if the Hill-Sachs was all the way over

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here, that would be a different story.

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But it's not.

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So, the position of the Hill-Sachs, the size of

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the Hill-Sachs, has a great bearing on whether

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you have engagement in either the mid-range or

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extreme abduction external rotation position.

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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