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Stabilizing Components of the Rotator Cuff

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I'm back to the axial projection, my least

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favored nation status projection for rotator cuff.

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We're still in the upper half of the shoulder.

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We're not quite at the humeral equator.

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But there are a few structures I'd like to draw for you.

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One is the biceps labral anchor complex.

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Now I'm a little below where it normally takes off,

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but I have this nice diagram that I can share with you.

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And the biceps takes off in the anterosuperior quadrant.

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It may come off like this, directly off the

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front of the labrum, and merge with it, almost

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like it plugs into the tip of the labrum.

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But it usually comes over the top of the labrum,

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as we'll see later on in the coronal projection.

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It also has a tremendous amount of variability as

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to where it takes off from anterior to posterior.

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So it can take off in the front, it can

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take off mid-coronally, it can even take off

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in the back, and have a very long course.

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Over the top of the humeral head, much like

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this, and then it reaches the intertubercular

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groove and descends as the biceps long head.

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The reason that this configuration is important,

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and I'll draw it and color it in to emphasize

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it, is because it contributes to, much as you

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would imagine here, depressing the humeral head.

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Keeping the humeral head from floating up,

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keeping the humeral head from disintering.

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Now, there are a few other wispy

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structures that are drawn in here.

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One you can see right there, I'll put an arrow on it.

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And that is, those are the lower fibers

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of the superior glenohumeral ligament.

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They're not considered really cuff contributors.

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But the biceps and its labral anchor,

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because of its position, on top of the

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humeral head for a short distance is.

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There's another structure here that is also.

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Considered part of the rotator cuff complex.

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And that is the coracohumeral ligament.

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Now ideally, I'd love to show this

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to you on a slightly higher cut.

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These are the lowermost fibers of it.

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It contributes to the anterior boundary of the rotator

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interval, which is this triangular space right here.

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But as it gets to the humeral head up higher,

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it sends fibers underneath the rotator cuff

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to contribute to the deepest layer, layer

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number six, of the rotator cuff complex.

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So those are two additional important

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structures that you see in the axial projection.

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The CHL, the coracohumeral ligament,

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and the biceps labral anchor complex.

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Another structure that plays into the stabilization

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of the shoulder is the capsule that is very thin.

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So we don't often comment specifically on capsular

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rupture or tear as a component of the rotator

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cuff, but deep somewhere in the back of your mind.

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Is the knowledge that it does.

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So, in a few moments, on our next segment, we'll

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move on to a lower more axial cut, and see how

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it contributes to evaluation of the rotator cuff.

Report

Description

Faculty

Stephen J Pomeranz, MD

Chief Medical Officer, ProScan Imaging. Founder, MRI Online

ProScan Imaging

Tags

Shoulder

Musculoskeletal (MSK)

MRI

Bone & Soft Tissues

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