The Shoulder
- Anatomy
- Complex interplay of 4 joints
- Synovial Joints
- Gleno-humeral
- Sterno-clavicular
- Acromio-clavicular
- Gliding Joint
- Scapulo-Thoracic
- Bony Anatomy
- Clavicle
- Humerus
- Head
- Shaft
- Greater Tuberosity
- Lesser Tuberosity
- Scapula
- Glenoid
- Acromion
- Body
- Spine
- Ligaments
- Gleno-humeral
- Acromio-clavicular
- Coraco-acromial
- Coraco-clavicular
- Bursa
- Subacromial
- Subdeltoid
- Muscles
- Inner sleeve-Rotator cuff
- Subscapularis- Internal rotator
- Supraspinatus- abductor
- Infraspinatus- external rotator; abductor
- Teres minor- external rotator
- Biceps (long head)
- Outer sleeve-Deltoid
- Pectoralis major
- Latissimus dorsi
- Teres major
- Scapula muscles
- Nerves
- Brachial plexus
- Axillary nerve- major nerve to the shoulder
- Musculocutaneous nerve- innervates the biceps
- Biomechanics
- Stability
- Function of the Rotator Cuff
- Delto-supraspinatus force couple
- Motion
- Gleno-humeral: scapula-thoracic
- Clavicle rotation
- Shoulder Exam
- History
- Trauma- mechanism of injury
- Pain- where, when, how long
- Function
- Physical exam
- Inspection
- Palpation
- Range of motion- active
- Strength
- Abduction- Supraspinatus/deltoid
- Internal rotation- Pectoralis major/Subscapularis/Latissimus dorsi
- External rotation- teres minor, Infraspinatus
- Sensation
- Axillary nerve-deltoid
- Median nerve- middle finger, palm side
- Ulnar nerve- 5th digit
- Radial nerve- first web space dorsal side
- Mucocutaneous nerve-top of forearm
- Special tests
- Apprehension
- Impingement sign
- Abduction sign
- Adduction sign
- Roentgenographic exam
- Trauma series- AP, Y view( a 40 degree lateral view for the shoulder)
- Axillary view- shot with arm up
- Stress views
- Arthrogram- contrast in the joint; MRI used more often now
- MRI- Can show tears of rotator cuff
- Clavicle Fractures
- The clavicle is the only bony structure that suspends the scapula and the arm from the axial skeleton (most commonly fractured bone in the body)
- Mechanism of injury
- Falls
- Outstretched arms
- Falling on side
- Classification
- Mid-third- 80%
- Distal-15%
- Inner third- 5%
- Signs and symptoms
- Arm held against chest
- Tender at fracture site
- Palpable deformity
- X-rays
- Treatment
- Sling (swathe)
- Figure of eight
- Shoulder spica cast
- Surgery- O.R.I.F
- Complications
- Neurovascular- can injure brachial plexus
- Malunion
- Nonunion
- Post-traumatic arthritis
- Injuries to the acromioclavicular joint (separated shoulder)
- A-C joint
- Acromioclavicular ligament
- Coracoclavicular ligament
- Mechanism of injury
- Classification- measures displacement on clavicle and acromion
- Type I- all ligaments function with no displacement
- Type II- ac ligaments torn but Coracoclavicular ligaments intact
- Type III- everything is torn
- Type IV, V, VI
- Signs and symptoms
- Joint tenderness
- Joint swelling
- Deformity
- X-rays
- Stress views-upright
- Treatment
- Shoulder harness (Kenny Howard Type)
- Sling
- Surgery
- Complications
- Chronic instability- small percentage never heal properly
- A-C joint arthritis
- Injuries to the Sternoclavicular joint
- Uncommon injury
- Large force, direct or indirect, to the shoulder
- Commonly in MVAs
- Classification
- Anterior dislocation
- Posterior dislocation- uncommon
- Traumatic vs. atraumatic
- Signs and symptoms
- Pain
- Deformity
- Posterior dislocation may have SOB, choking sensation
- X-rays
- Special views
- C-T scan, tomograms
- Treatment
- Posterior dislocation requires treatment immediately
- Closed reduction- anesthesia
- Towel clip reduction
- Figure of eight cast
- Sling
- Glenohumeral dislocation- traumatic
- Anterior shoulder dislocation-97%
- Subcoracoid
- Subglenoid
- Subclavicular and intrathoracic- very rare
- Mechanism
- Direct force
- Indirect force- abduction-external rotation
- Signs and symptoms
- Severe pain
- Arm slightly abducted and externally rotated
- Squared off appearance of shoulder
- Anterior shoulder fullness
- Positive apprehension signs- recurrent dislocation
- X-rays
- AP
- Y view
- Axillary view
- Hill-Sachs lesion- Glenoid makes impaction fracture in humeral head
- Seen in patients with multiple dislocations
- Bankart lesion- Ligaments tears a piece of bone off of the glenoid during a dislocation
- Pathognomonic of dislocations
- Treatment
- Closed reduction
- IV sedation
- Shoulder immobilization
- Rehab
- Complications
- Recurrence- especially with young people
- Nerve injury- axillary nerve
- Fracture
- Posterior Shoulder dislocation- 1-3%- very rare
- Mechanism of injury
- Direct force
- Indirect force
- Electric shock
- Seizure- must be aware of posterior dislocations
- It is more common to have an anterior shoulder dislocation during a seizure
- Signs and symptoms
- Over 60% missed on initial exam
- Arm in fixed adduction and internal rotation
- External rotation is blocked
- Anterior aspect of shoulder flat
- Coracoid process prominent
- X-rays
- Treatment
- Closed reduction
- Open reduction
- Sling
- Orthosis/cast
- Complication
- Missed diagnosis- very common to miss
- Fractures
- Impingement Syndrome- most common shoulder complaint; shoulder pain with arm elevation
- Other names/causes
- Painful arc syndrome
- Bursitis
- Tendonitis
- Rotator Cuff Tears
- Biceps Tendon Ruptures
- Stages
- Stage 1- Acute inflammation (overuse type; younger person)
- Stage 2- Chronic (fibrosis, collagen failure; over 40)
- Stage 3- Rupture of biceps and rotator cuff
- Failure of rotator cuff; extension of stage 2
- Stress fracture
- Stage 4- Cuff tear arthropathy
- Mechanism
- Related to repetitive overhead activities
- Acute injury to rotator cuff
- Bony changes
- Signs and symptoms
- Pain with overhead activities
- Night pain
- Decreased function in elevation
- Positive impingement sign, abduction test
- Impingement test- inject lidocaine into subacromial space
- Relief of pain is indicative of impingement
- X-rays
- Arthrogram
- MRI
- Treatment
- NSAIDs
- Activity modification
- Physical therapy- strengthen rotator cuff
- Sub-acromial injection-cortisone
- Surgery
- Acromioplasty
- Rotator cuff repair
- Adhesive Capsulitis- frozen shoulder
- Women
- 40s
- Nondominate arm
- +/- history of trauma
- Neck pain
- Insidious onset
- Signs and symptoms
- Limited ROM in all planes
- Pain at the end of ROM
- X-rays
- Normal
- Arthrogram
- Treatment
- NSAIDs
- Physical therapy
- Time
- Manipulation under anesthesia
- Arthritis
- Wear and tear-osteoarthritis
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Uncommon in the shoulder (G-H joint)
- Usually affecting the A-C joint
- Signs and symptoms
- Inflammation of the joint
- Swelling
- Pain
- Stiffness
- Treatment
- Resection of clavicle- for AC joint
- Anti-inflammatory agents
- Shoulder replacement- For G-H joint arthritis