X-Ray Rounds: (Plain) Radiographic Evaluation of The Shoulder
This document provides an overview of shoulder anatomy and radiographic evaluation of the shoulder. It describes the bones and joints of the shoulder including the humerus, scapula, clavicle, glenohumeral joint, acromioclavicular joint, and sternoclavicular joint. Common radiographic views of the shoulder like AP, axillary lateral, and scapular Y views are explained. The document also reviews indications for shoulder x-rays and presents examples of normal and abnormal radiographic findings with descriptions and treatment recommendations.
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X-Ray Rounds: (Plain) Radiographic Evaluation of The Shoulder
This document provides an overview of shoulder anatomy and radiographic evaluation of the shoulder. It describes the bones and joints of the shoulder including the humerus, scapula, clavicle, glenohumeral joint, acromioclavicular joint, and sternoclavicular joint. Common radiographic views of the shoulder like AP, axillary lateral, and scapular Y views are explained. The document also reviews indications for shoulder x-rays and presents examples of normal and abnormal radiographic findings with descriptions and treatment recommendations.
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X-Ray Rounds:
(Plain) Radiographic Evaluation
of the Shoulder Garry W. K. Ho, M.D. Sports Medicine Fellow - VCU / Fairfax Family Practice December 2006 Anatomy 3 Bones Humerus Scapula Clavicle 3 Joints Glenohumeral Acromioclavicular Sternoclavicular 1 Articulation Scapulothoracic Anatomy Humerus Head * Anatomic neck Surgical neck Greater tubercle* Lesser tubercle* Intertubercular groove Deltoid tuberosity Shaft * Anatomy Scapula Body Ventral (Costal) surface Dorsal surface Borders Superior Lateral (Axillary) Medial (Vertebral) Angles Superior Inferior Lateral (Head) Anatomy Scapula Glenoid Acromion Coracoid Subscapular fossa Scapular spine Supraspinatus fossa Infraspinatus fossa Great scapular notch Suprascapular notch Anatomy Scapular Y (Lateral) Anatomy Clavicle First bone to start ossification; last to finish The only bony strut b/w UE and axial skeleton Flat outer (lateral, acromial) third Traps, Delt, AC / CC ligaments Tubular medial (inner, sternal) third Strongest in axial load Middle third Most vulnerable to Fx Anatomy Glenohumeral joint Ball and socket Purpose: placement of primary prehensile limb Very mobile; majority (0-120) of shoulder movement (0-180) Price: instability 45% of all dislocations Joint stability depends on multiple factors Anatomy Glenohumeral joint Passive stability Joint conformity Vacuum effect of jt vol Synovial fluid adhesion and cohesion Scapular inclination Glenoid labrum (50%) Coracoid ligaments CCL, CAL Joint capsule Glenohumeral ligaments SGHL, MGHL, IGHLC Bony restraints Glenoid fossa, Acromion, Coracoid Coracohumeral ligament Anatomy Glenohumeral joint Active stability
Scapulothoracic motion Scapular-humeral rhythm AP View of the Shoulder Transthoracic, or Routine AP View AP relative to thorax Suboptimal view of Glenohumeral joint Good view of AC joint
Scapular, Grashey, or Glenohumeral AP View Better visualize bony relationships incl GH joint Suboptimal view of AC joint
Both have been called True AP Views AP View of the Shoulder Routine AP View Clavicle Scapula Acromion & scapular spine Coracoid Borders & angles AC & SC joints Glenoid Both ant & post lips May obscure HH Humerus Head & necks Gr & Lsr tuberosities AP View of the Shoulder Glenohumeral, Grashey, or Scapular AP View
Same structures
AC joint not visualized as well
Better visualize the glenoid & humeral head (especially with ER view) AP View of the Shoulder AP View of the Shoulder AP View in External Rotation Greater tuberosity & soft tissues profiled and better visualized Best w/ Scapular AP
AP View in Internal Rotation May demonstrate Hill-Sachs lesions GH instability Best w/ Routine AP Which AP view should I get? Routine AP with humeral head in internal rotation (IR)
Scapular / Glenohumeral AP with humeral head in external rotation (ER) Harding WG, Nowicki KD. Plane talk about shoulder radiographs. Phys Sportsmed 1998; 26(2) Transthoracic Lateral View of the Shoulder Not usually done
Not as useful
Many obscuring over- and underlying structures
Axillary Lateral View of the Shoulder Good view of anterior- posterior relationship of GH joint
Coracoid Acromion Humerus Glenoid GH joint Axillary Lateral View of the Shoulder Alternate Axillary views 45 Velpeau View magnified axillary view Scapular Y Lateral View of the Shoulder Relationship b/w humeral head and glenoid
Acromion Coracoid Scapular body Scapular spine Scapular Y Lateral View of the Shoulder Scapular outlet view A variation of scapular Y view Same projection, but with beam tilted 5- 10 caudad Shoulder impingement: to evaluate the subacromial space and the supraspinatus outlet Other Views of the Shoulder Indications American College of Radiology (ACR) Appropriateness Criteria for Musculoskeletal Imaging in Shoulder Trauma
Developed in 1995, revised in 2005
AP with IR & ER, and lateral (axillary or scapular Y) views recommended for: R/O fracture or dislocation Subacute (~3 months) shoulder pain suspicious for: Bursitis / tendonitis RTC tear or impingement (as initial study) Indications Stevenson and Trojian: JFP in July 2002 No definitive studies on the needs of shoulder radiographs have been done Recommended obtaining plain films for: Decreased ROM (especially: abduction < 90) Severe pain History of trauma Glenohumeral AP, outlet & axillary lateral views Add AP with IR & ER in cases of trauma AC joint views for suspected AC joint disease Neck, chest, abdominal imaging for suspected referred pain Stevenson JH, Trojian T. Applied evidence: evaluation of shoulder pain. J Fam Pract 2002; 51(7):605-611. Indications Other indications Suspicion of instability Weakness of shoulder motions The patient cannot communicate (altered mental status, alcohol intoxication, or other) Persistent pain and decreased ROM Anytime your history and physical dont give you enough information Normal routine AP in IR Normal routine AP in ER Normal axillary view Routine AP and axillary views
Tx: surgical eval Proximal Humerus Fractures: Neer Classification 2-part fractures May be Txd conservatively if: Displaced < 1 cm Angulation < 45 No dislocations Good reduction No intraarticular involvement Anatomic neck intact Otherwise: surgical evaluation All else: surgical evaluation Routine AP in ER, axillary, & scapular Y views
Anterior- inferior dislocation No fracture
Tx: Conservative Routine AP in ER, axillary, & scapular Y views
Bulb sign, rim sign, loss of parallelism
Posterior dislocation; No fracture
Tx: Conservative Routine AP view Inferior GH dislocation (Luxatio erecta) - Rare Tx: may attempt CR Post-reduction AP film Routine AP in IR and axillary lateral views
No dislocation + concave osseous impression in postero-lateral aspect of humeral head
What is this lesion called?
Hill-Sachs lesion
Tx: conservative vs. operative Hill-Sachs Lesions Bankart Lesions Type III AC separation Tx: conservative mostly Type I: conservative tx
Type II: conservative tx
Type III: conservative tx for most; may consider surgery for active heavy laborers, frequent overhead activity, athletes 20-25 y/o
Type IV-VI: surgery Clavicle Fractures Mostly conservative treatment Consider surgery for: Group II Fxs (esp if medial to CCL) Open fractures Neurovascular compromise Severe associated injuries E.g. flail chest, mult rib fxs, scapulothoracic dissociation Nonunion / malunion Scapular Fractures
Mostly conservative treatment
Surgical indications: Controversial Displaced intraarticular fxs involving > 25% articular surface Scapular neck Fxs with > 1 cm medial displaced Angulation > 40 Concomitant fxs of clavicles, coracoid, acromion, scapular spine Fracture-dislocations Routine AP and Axillary Lateral Views