Department of Orthopaedic Sports Medicine, Yukioka Hospital, Osaka, Japan.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka University, Suita, Japan.
Am J Sports Med. 2019 Mar;47(3):695-703. doi: 10.1177/0363546518819471. Epub 2019 Jan 23.
Recurrence of glenohumeral joint instability after primary traumatic anterior instability is not rare, and bipolar bone loss is one of the most critical factors for recurrent instability, but the development process of bipolar bone defects is still unclear.
To investigate the development process of bipolar bone defects from primary to recurrent instability among shoulders with traumatic anterior instability evaluated at least twice by computed tomography (CT).
Case series; Level of evidence, 4.
There were 44 patients (47 shoulders) with recurrence after primary instability in which bone morphology was evaluated by 3-dimensional reconstructed CT at primary instability (initial CT) and after recurrence. As CT was performed 3 times for 3 shoulders including primary injury and the second episode of instability (first recurrence), there were 50 CT evaluations. Morphological changes between the initial CT evaluation at primary instability and the second CT evaluation at first recurrence were investigated for 25 shoulders, with the mean interval since initial CT being 9.8 months (range, 2-23 months). Changes between initial CT evaluation and final CT evaluation after ≥2 recurrences were also investigated for 25 shoulders, while the mean number of instability episodes including primary instability was 8.0 (range, 3-40) and the mean interval since initial CT was 18.5 months (range, 5-56 months).
At primary instability, the prevalence of Hill-Sachs lesions (66.0%) was almost double that of glenoid defects (34.0%), but their prevalence was different between shoulders with primary subluxation (42.3% and 23.8%, respectively) and those with primary dislocation (84.7% and 42.3%, respectively). After recurrence, glenoid defects became significantly more frequent (at first recurrence, 72%; after ≥2 recurrences, 76%), while Hill-Sachs lesions showed a smaller increase (88% and 80%, respectively), so there was no difference between the prevalence of the 2 lesions. The sizes of glenoid defects and Hill-Sachs lesions also enlarged after recurrence, and large bone defects were frequently recognized after recurrence. While bipolar bone loss was not so frequent at primary instability (29.8%), bipolar bone loss increased significantly after recurrence (at first recurrence, 72%; after ≥2 recurrences, 72%). All Hill-Sachs lesions were on track at primary instability, but off-track lesions were recognized in 3 of 47 shoulders (6.4%) after recurrence.
In most shoulders with recurrent instability, a Hill-Sachs lesion developed first, followed by a glenoid defect, leading to bipolar bone loss. Off-track Hill-Sachs lesions were detected only after recurrence.
初次创伤性前不稳定后盂肱关节再不稳定并不少见,双极骨缺失是复发性不稳定的最关键因素之一,但双极骨缺损的发展过程仍不清楚。
通过至少两次计算机断层扫描(CT)评估创伤性前不稳定的肩部,探讨初次不稳定后双极骨缺损的发展过程。
病例系列;证据水平,4 级。
共有 44 例(47 个肩部)患者在初次不稳定时通过三维重建 CT 评估骨质形态,在初次不稳定(初始 CT)和复发后进行 CT 评估。由于 3 个肩部(包括初次损伤和第二次不稳定发作(首次复发))进行了 3 次 CT 检查,因此共有 50 次 CT 评估。研究了初次不稳定时初始 CT 评估与首次复发时第二次 CT 评估之间的形态变化,初始 CT 平均间隔时间为 9.8 个月(范围,2-23 个月)。对 25 个肩部进行了初始 CT 评估与至少 2 次复发后的最终 CT 评估之间的变化研究,其中初次不稳定的不稳定发作次数平均为 8.0 次(范围,3-40 次),初始 CT 平均间隔时间为 18.5 个月(范围,5-56 个月)。
初次不稳定时,Hill-Sachs 病变(66.0%)的患病率几乎是盂唇缺损(34.0%)的两倍,但在初次半脱位(42.3%和 23.8%)和初次脱位(84.7%和 42.3%)的肩部之间,它们的患病率不同。复发后,盂唇缺损明显更常见(首次复发时为 72%;至少 2 次复发时为 76%),而 Hill-Sachs 病变的增加较小(88%和 80%),因此两种病变的患病率没有差异。盂唇缺损和 Hill-Sachs 病变的大小也在复发后增大,并且在复发后经常发现大的骨缺损。虽然初次不稳定时双极骨缺失并不常见(29.8%),但复发后双极骨缺失明显增加(首次复发时为 72%;至少 2 次复发时为 72%)。初次不稳定时所有 Hill-Sachs 病变均在轨道上,但复发后在 47 个肩部中的 3 个(6.4%)发现了脱轨病变。
在大多数复发性不稳定的肩部中,Hill-Sachs 病变首先发展,随后是盂唇缺损,导致双极骨缺失。仅在复发后才发现脱轨的 Hill-Sachs 病变。