Interactive Transcript
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Okay, let's take a real case of a dislocator and
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examine the on-track, off-track characteristics.
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Let's scroll axially.
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We see a more narrow part of the hill-sachs
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and a broader portion of the hill-sachs.
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Let's measure it from its ridge, its bony ridge
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right there, to as far as the eye can see where it,
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where the ridge ends and it meets the rotator cuff.
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This is a more medial portion of the cuff.
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The cuff continues on more anterolaterally.
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And that measurement is about 19 millimeters,
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1.89 centimeters.
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Now let's go over to our sagittal en face view
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of the glenoid cup and see if I can master
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making a circle that's about the right size.
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It looks like it's about the right size.
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Let's move the circle over.
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That's a pretty good fit.
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We want our dot to be right in the middle of the glenoid.
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So now we're going to take the diameter of the rotator cuff.
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So let's do that.
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We'll call that big D.
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So big D is all the way from here to here.
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And we're getting a number of 2.
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91 centimeters or 29 millimeters.
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Now let's take that and multiply it by 0.83.
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28 00:01:32,325 --> 00:01:33,075 And what do we get?
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20, 24.
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So we get 24 millimeters.
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Then we're going to subtract from that.
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Little d.
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So what's little d?
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Little d is the measurement of the bone loss.
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We'll say it's from there to there,
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because here's a big bone fragment.
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Let's make it parallel to our circle.
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And little d loss is 9 12, let's say 10 millimeters.
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So 24 minus 10 is 14 millimeters.
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So over here we've got almost 1.
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9 centimeters, or 19 millimeters.
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Over here we've got 14 millimeters, so the 19
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millimeters is greater than the 14 millimeters.
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Therefore, we have an off-track scenario.
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Now, let's use a different technique.
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Let's pull it down again, pull it down over here,
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and I simply want to focus on the radius measurement
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technique to see the amount of glenoid area bone loss.
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So this time, I'm going to use my drawing tool,
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and I'm going to make a Best fit circle again.
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Then I'm going to put a dot in the middle of that circle.
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And I'm going to get a radius going backwards.
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And then a radius going forwards.
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Now I'm going to see how much of that
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radius going forwards is attenuated.
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So let's take a look at that with a different color.
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We'll make it a little thinner so we can see it.
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Let's use light blue.
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And from here all the way back to here, sorry.
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There's light blue again.
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From here, all the way back to here.
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We've got almost 100 percent of the anterior radius.
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Maybe it's a little less.
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Maybe from here.
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So we've got almost 100 percent of the radius.
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Let's say 80 percent of the radius is
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reduced in the front compared to the back.
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Because they should be equal.
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So an 80 percent radius reduction corresponds to to
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a 38 percent area reduction in the best fit circle.
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And we've said in other vignettes, that when you get above
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a 25 percent area reduction, it is simply catastrophic,
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or potentially catastrophic, and usually catastrophic.
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So this patient has, Everything going against it.
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They are off track, and they have
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substantial glenoid bone loss.
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So this is exactly the kind of patient who would
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be a candidate for a latarjay bristo or a
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latarjay procedure where you do a coracoid
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transfer with the muscles and capsule over to
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the anterior inferior glenoid as a bone block.
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And you might also consider doing a humeral head
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Remplissage, where you take the infraspinatus and bury
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it in the humeral head defect along with the capsule.
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And you might even have to augment that
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with a piece of bone or bone block.
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Those are methods you can use to calculate
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the risk of recurrent dislocation.
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And what procedure you should perform proactively.
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