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Radiology, Vol 160, 669-673, Copyright © 1986 by Radiological Society of North America


ARTICLES

Shoulder instability: impact of glenohumeral arthrotomography on treatment

GY el-Khoury, MH Kathol, JB Chandler and JP Albright

We used arthrotomography to study the glenoid labrum in 114 patients. Sixty-nine of the patients had anatomic instability of the shoulder (including recurrent dislocation and subluxation of the shoulder), and 45 patients had functional instability of the shoulder (denoted by chronic pain, clicking of the joint, and the sensation that an unstable condition exists without the objective signs of it). Labral tears were revealed arthrotomographically in 86% of the patients with anatomic instability, while only 40% of the patients with functional instability had labral abnormalities, and these were primarily of minor severity. Fifty-six patients (44 of whom had anatomic instability; 12, functional instability) required surgery. The surgical findings were correlated with the arthrotomographic findings, and no false-positive results were revealed. However, arthrotomography demonstrated only part of the pathologic condition of two patients. These results confirm that there is a strong correlation between labral pathologic conditions and anatomic instability of the shoulder. Arthrotomographic studies have a great impact on the selection of therapy in cases of both anatomic and functional instability of the shoulder.


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Am J Sports MedHome page
S. H. Liu, M. H. Henry, S. Nuccion, M. S. Shapiro, and F. Dorey
Diagnosis of Glenoid Labral Tears: A Comparison Between Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Clinical Examinations
Am. J. Sports Med., March 1, 1996; 24(2): 149 - 154.
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