journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090928/scapular-dyskinesia-how-to-differentiate-%C3%A2-between-etiologies
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eric R Wagner, Anthony L Karzon, Zaamin B Hussain, Jon J P Warner, Bassem T Elhassan, Joaquin Sanchez-Sotelo
It is important to discuss the importance of synchronous balance between periscapular muscles for scapulothoracic motion and resultant scapulohumeral rhythm. Abnormalities in this balance can lead to scapular dyskinesia and winging, affecting shoulder motion and leading to impingement. Strategies exist to diagnose and differentiate between pathologies such as muscle paralysis (eg, trapezius or serratus anterior) or overactivity (eg, pectoralis minor). The physician should be aware of the role of diagnostic imaging, as well as the unique considerations for patients with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090927/the-scapula-the-greater-masquerader-of-%C3%A2-shoulder-pathologies
#22
REVIEW
Eric R Wagner, Zaamin B Hussain, Anthony L Karzon, Jon J P Warner, Bassem T Elhassan, Joaquin Sanchez-Sotelo
A comprehensive review of scapular pathologies and their effect on shoulder function is necessary to determine the best treatment options. The coordinated motion between the scapulothoracic and glenohumeral joints is essential for shoulder motion and depends on the balanced activity of the periscapular muscles. Disruption in these muscles can cause abnormal scapular motion and compensatory glenohumeral movements, leading to misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis. Scapular pathologies can arise from muscle overactivity or underactivity/paralysis, resulting in a range of scapulothoracic abnormal motion (STAM)...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090926/posterior-glenoid-bone-block-reconstruction-indications-techniques-and-outcomes
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rajiv P Reddy, Matthew Como, Anya Singh-Varma, Amin Karimi, Julie Y Bishop, Albert Lin
Posterior shoulder instability is of particular therapeutic interest, as it typically affects patients with high functional demands such as young athletes and active adults. Although posterior capsulolabral repair has high return-to-sport rates, it is associated with recurrent instability of up to 11%. Posterior glenoid bone loss and significant glenoid retroversion have been identified as risk factors for recurrent instability and failure after primary arthroscopic soft-tissue repair. Therefore, posterior glenoid bone block reconstruction may be indicated for glenoid bone loss 20% or greater (as measured by the perfect circle technique) or greater than 10% in the setting of pathologic glenoid, failed primary posterior labral repair, incompetent posterior capsular tissue, or significant risk factors for failure of soft-tissue repair...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090925/humeral-head-reconstruction-of-reverse-%C3%A2-hill-sachs-lesions
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jelle P van der List, Brian R Waterman
Compared with anterior instability, posterior shoulder dislocations are a rare entity and are often missed at presentation. A concomitant anteromedial impression fracture of the humeral head, or a reverse Hill-Sachs lesion, is commonly present with these dislocations and is more pronounced with a longer timeline to reduction. Treatment of these defects ranges from nonsurgical treatment to soft-tissue procedures, bony reconstruction, and arthroplasty. Management may be dictated by various factors, such as patient demands, defect size and location, concomitant injuries, and underlying etiology...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090924/preparing-for-and-executing-the-ideal-posterior-%C3%A2-labral-repair
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel J Stokes, Jeffrey D Hassebrock, Lisa A Malyak, Rachel M Frank
Posterior labral tears are a source of pain and instability of the shoulder. Despite being relatively uncommon (reported in approximately 10% of instability cases), the incidence of posterior labral tear is increasingly recognized as underestimated in highly active populations. Posterior labral tears can result from a traumatic posterior dislocation or repetitive microtrauma, leading to posterior chondral/labral attrition. Patients often present with vague, deep-seated shoulder discomfort rather than the sensation of instability...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090923/proximal-humerus-fractures-how-to-achieve-best-outcomes
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erika Roddy, Michael J Gardner, Surena Namdari, George S Athwal, Jonah Hebert-Davies
The treatment of proximal humerus fractures remains controversial. Although treatment modalities may vary, the goal of obtaining the best outcomes for patients remains the same. Most proximal humerus fractures can be treated nonsurgically but should still be managed actively. Deciding on surgical management requires a good understanding of indications and options. Indications for open reduction and internal fixation include younger or active patients with displaced two-, three-, and four-part fractures as well as fracture-dislocations with head-split patterns...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090922/common-complication-from-routine-shoulder-surgery-postoperative-stiffness-after-rotator-cuff-repair
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Liam T Kane, Jay D Wilkening, Majd Keener, Robert Z Tashjian, Reza Omid, Surena Namdari
Rotator cuff repair is commonly performed, and stiffness represents one of the most common complications. Unique characteristics of postoperative stiffness, including its natural history and pathoanatomy, differentiate it from other etiologies of shoulder stiffness. Patient risk factors that have been associated with postoperative stiffness should be reviewed to better help clinicians tailor their presurgical risk assessment. Although stiffness in this setting has clinical consequences for patients' postoperative shoulder function, it is important to discuss the important implications of stiffness as it relates to rotator cuff healing...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090921/infection-in-shoulder-arthroplasty-prevention-diagnosis-and-treatment
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Grant E Garrigues, Albert Lin, Alexander J Hodakowski, Amin Karimi, Noah J Quinlan, Paul S Pottinger, Jason E Hsu
Prosthetic joint infection is a devastating complication following shoulder arthroplasty that can lead to pain, poor function, and poor quality of life. With the increasing number of shoulder arthroplasties performed annually, recognition of prosthetic infection and treatment is necessary. The skin surrounding the shoulder has a unique microbiome, and Cutibacterium acnes is the most commonly encountered bacteria causing prosthetic joint infection. C acnes is a low-virulence organism that resides in the subcutaneous layer of the skin...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090920/pediatric-phalanx-fractures
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine C May, Julia L Conroy, R Glenn Gaston, Tristan B Weir, Meredith N Osterman, A Lee Osterman, Joshua M Abzug
Phalangeal fractures are extremely common in the pediatric and adolescent populations. The incidence of phalangeal fractures peaks in children ages 10 to 14 years, corresponding to the age in which children begin contact sports. Younger children are more likely to experience crush injuries, whereas older children often sustain phalangeal fractures during sports. The physis is particularly susceptible to fracture because of the biomechanically weak nature of the physis compared with the surrounding ligaments and bone...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090919/an-approach-to-recurrent-clubfoot-deformity-%C3%A2-in-adolescents
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anthony I Riccio
Even under ideal circumstances, recurrence of infantile clubfoot deformity following the Ponseti method of treatment is to be expected to occur in as many as 20% of patients. When encountered early in childhood, these recurrences are usually amenable to further casting and limited surgery. Creation of a plantigrade foot, however, becomes much more challenging when recurrences present during adolescence and early adulthood. Because of the stiffer nature of these deformities in older patients, the fact that they are often more severe because of varying lengths of neglect, and the often deleterious effects of prior intra-articular surgeries on joint health, a principled approach is recommended for both the assessment of these feet and development of an appropriate treatment plan...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090918/hip-pain-in-adolescent-patients
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ishaan Swarup, Christopher Makarewich, Todd J Blumberg, Nirav K Pandya
Hip pain is a common complaint in adolescents. There are several causes for hip pain in this population, with dysplasia and impingement being the most common; however, other conditions such as extra-articular impingement, torsional disorders, labral tears, and osteochondral lesions also require consideration. Many of these conditions are related to underlying anatomic abnormalities and increased activity in this age group. An understanding of the common pathologies of the adolescent hip is integral to the evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment of these patients...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090917/tweener-fractures-in-children-and-adolescents
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dustin A Greenhill, Arianna Trionfo
Tweener fractures are defined as long bone or metadiaphyseal fractures in a pediatric population for which multiple treatment options may be used. It is important to focus specifically on patients nearing skeletal maturity who present with length-unstable femoral shaft fractures, both-bone forearm fractures, distal radius metadiaphyseal fractures, and adolescent tibial shaft fractures. Although there is no gold standard of treatment for any of these fracture patterns, it is important to discuss the risks and benefits, proper application, and important technical aspects of each treatment method to allow surgeons to make an informed decision and optimize surgical outcomes in this patient population...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090916/management-principles-and-current-debates-surrounding-common-pediatric-elbow-fractures
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John R Hanna, Neal Gerard Canastra, Aristides I Cruz, Craig P Eberson
Elbow fractures are among the most common fractures sustained in pediatric patients. A specific set of pediatric elbow fractures (olecranon, radial neck, and lateral condyle fractures) comprises the ones that occur most often. It is important to review commonly accepted principles in the evaluation and treatment of these injuries as well as highlight some debates that exist within the literature regarding the optimal management of these injuries. Although management of pediatric olecranon, radial neck, and lateral condyle fractures has been well described, controversy persists among orthopaedic surgeons regarding the surgical indications and preferred fixation techniques for these injuries...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090915/update-on-pediatric-medial-epicondyle-%C3%A2-fractures
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Giancarlo Medina Pérez, Neal Gerard Canastra, Aristides I Cruz
The ideal evaluation and treatment of pediatric patients with medial epicondyle fractures remain controversial. It is important to examine the most recent literature and provide an update on the current clinical practices, imaging modalities, treatment techniques, outcomes, and complications associated with displaced pediatric medial epicondyle fractures. There remains substantial variability across recommended treatment options and the outcomes between surgical versus nonsurgical management of these injuries...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090914/transphyseal-fracture-of-the-distal-humerus
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine C May, Joshua M Abzug
Transphyseal fractures of the distal humerus often occur in children younger than 4 years as a result of birth trauma, nonaccidental trauma, or falls from a low height. It is important to identify and treat these injuries in a timely manner to ensure successful management. Most transphyseal fractures of the distal humerus are treated with closed reduction and percutaneous pinning with the aid of an elbow arthrogram. The most common complication following a fracture is cubitus varus caused by growth arrest, malunion, or osteonecrosis of the medial condyle...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090913/supracondylar-humerus-fractures-when-lateral-entry-pins-are-not-enough
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter D Fabricant
Percutaneous pin configuration for the management of pediatric supracondylar humerus fractures has been studied extensively both in the biomechanics laboratory and in the clinical setting. Medial entry pins (ie, crossed pinning) increase supracondylar humerus fracture construct stability under certain loading conditions. However, there are noted drawbacks of medial entry pinning, specifically the risk of iatrogenic ulnar nerve injury. In most circumstances, the additional biomechanical stability of crossed pinning is unlikely to be clinically necessary for maintenance of fracture alignment, but there are scenarios in which medial entry pins should be strongly considered...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090912/controversies-in-the-management-of-pediatric-musculoskeletal-infections-an-international-viewpoint
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mohan V Belthur, Ashish S Ranade, Fergal Monsell, Martin J Herman
Pediatric musculoskeletal infections (MSIs) are a major contributor to the global burden of musculoskeletal disease in children and young adults. If untreated, or treated inappropriately or inadequately, pediatric bone and joint infections can be fatal or result in morbidity that causes significant functional disabilities to the patient and economic burden to the family and the community at large. The past decade has witnessed many advances in this field with respect to early diagnosis, management, and prevention of complications...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090911/controversies-in-oncologic-pediatric-%C3%A2-limb-salvage
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew T Houdek, Akihiko Takeuchi, Lee Jeys, R Lor Randall
With advances in chemotherapy and radiation therapy, surgical treatment of patients with bone sarcomas has advanced from most patients undergoing an amputation to now most patients undergoing a limb salvage procedure. With the advances of limb salvage surgical techniques, reconstructive procedures have expanded to include autografts, allografts, endoprosthetic replacements, and rotationplasty. In a growing child, the decision to perform each of these reconstructive options is individualized and each needs to be considered to provide the patient with the optimal oncologic and functional outcome, while being durable to minimize the risk of complications and subsequent surgeries...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090910/reconstruction-of-bony-defects-with-motorized-intramedullary-nails-after-tumor-resection
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lee M Zuckerman, Valerae O Lewis, Daniel E Prince, Michael D Neel
Motorized intramedullary lengthening nails allow for transport of a bone segment for limb lengthening, deformity correction, healing of nonunion, and intercalary distraction osteogenesis. Resection of tumors involving the bone can result in substantial defects that require reconstruction. Use of these nails allows for a biologic reconstruction with the incorporation of allograft or by distraction osteogenesis. Limb lengthening after an internal hemipelvectomy where the hip joint is resected can be performed to improve gait, decrease pain, and prevent the need for a custom shoe or shoe lift...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38090909/advances-in-oncologic-shoulder-girdle-resection-and-reconstruction
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew T Houdek, Bassem T Elhassan, Steven L Moran, Eric R Wagner
The bony shoulder girdle consists of the clavicle, humerus, and scapula, which work synergistically to form a complex articulation that is essential for use of the upper extremity. The shoulder girdle is the most common location for primary and secondary bone tumors in the upper extremity, and following resection of these tumors, reconstruction of the upper extremity is challenging. Compared with those in the lower extremity, reconstructive techniques in the upper extremity have historically been unreliable and fraught with complications and poor functional outcomes...
2024: Instructional Course Lectures
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