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A cadaveric model of the throwing shoulder: a possible etiology of superior labrum anterior-to-posterior lesions.

The Journal of bone and joint surgery. American volume 2005 Vol.87(4) p. 824-31

Grossman MG, Tibone JE, McGarry MH, Schneider DJ, Veneziani S, Lee TQ

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Abstract

[BACKGROUND] It has been speculated that a shift of the throwing arc commonly develops in athletes who perform overhead activities, resulting in greater external rotation and decreased internal rotation caused by anterior capsular laxity and posterior capsular contracture, respectively. Osseous adaptation in the form of increased humeral and glenoid retroversion may provide a protective function in the asymptomatic athlete but cannot explain the pathological changes seen in the shoulder of the throwing athlete. Therefore, the objective of the present study was to examine the biomechanical effects of capsular changes in a cadaveric model.

[METHODS] Ten cadaveric shoulders were tested with a custom shoulder-testing device. Humeral rotational range of motion, the position of the humerus in maximum external rotation, and glenohumeral translations in the anterior, posterior, superior, and inferior directions were measured with the shoulder in 90 degrees of abduction. Translations were measured with the humerus secured in 90 degrees of external rotation. To simulate anterior laxity due to posterior capsular contracture, the capsule was nondestructively stretched 30% beyond maximum external rotation with the shoulder in 90 degrees of abduction. This was followed by the creation of a 10-mm posterior capsular contracture. Rotational, humeral shift, and translational tests were performed for the intact normal shoulder, after anterior capsular stretching, and after simulated posterior capsular contracture.

[RESULTS] Nondestructive capsular stretching resulted in a significant increase in external rotation (average increase, 18.2 degrees 2.1 degrees ; p < 0.001), and subsequent simulated posterior capsular contracture resulted in a significant decrease in internal rotation (average decrease, 8.8 degrees +/- 2.3 degrees ; p = 0.02). There also was a significant increase in anterior translation with the application of a 20-N anterior translational force after nondestructive capsular stretching (average increase, 1.7 +/- 0.3 mm, p = 0.0006). The humeral head translated posteroinferiorly when the humerus was rotated from neutral to maximum external rotation. This did not change significantly in association with anterior capsular stretching. Following simulated posterior capsular contracture, there was a trend toward a more posterosuperior position of the humeral head with the humerus in maximum external rotation in comparison with the position in the stretched conditions, although these differences were not significant.

[CONCLUSIONS] A posterior capsular contracture with decreased internal rotation does not allow the humerus to externally rotate into its normal posteroinferior position in the cocking phase of throwing. Instead, the humeral head is forced posterosuperiorly, which may explain the etiology of Type-II superior labrum anterior-to-posterior lesions in overhead athletes.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
합병증 capsular contracture 피막구축 dict 7
해부 glenoid scispacy 1
해부 capsular scispacy 1
해부 cadaveric scispacy 1
해부 humerus scispacy 1
해부 anterior scispacy 1
합병증 cadaveric shoulders scispacy 1
합병증 humeral head scispacy 1
합병증 humerus scispacy 1
약물 [CONCLUSIONS] A posterior capsular contracture with scispacy 1
질환 contracture C0009917
Contracture
scispacy 1
질환 abduction scispacy 1
질환 increase in external rotation scispacy 1
질환 Osseous scispacy 1
질환 capsule scispacy 1
기타 labrum anterior-to-posterior lesions scispacy 1
기타 anterior capsular scispacy 1
기타 posterior capsular scispacy 1
기타 posterosuperior scispacy 1
기타 Type-II scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Athletic Injuries; Biomechanical Phenomena; Cadaver; Contracture; Humans; Joint Capsule; Joint Diseases; Joint Instability; Middle Aged; Models, Biological; Range of Motion, Articular; Shoulder Joint; Sports

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