What are the attachments of the supraspinatus muscle?
Supraspinous/fossa of the scapula
Upper facet of the greater tuberosity of the humerus
What are the attachments of the infraspinatus?
Infraspinous fossa of the scapula
Middle facet of the greater tuberosity of the humerus
What are the attachments of teres minor?
Infero medial border of the scapula
Lower facet of the greater tuberosity of the humerus
What are the attachments of the subscapularis?
Subscapula fossa of the scapula
Lesser tuberosity of the humerus
What are the attachments of the biceps brachii long head?
Supragelnoid tubercle’
Radial tuberosity
and fibrous lacertus
List some causes of shoulder pain
What is the typical presentation of rotator cuff pain?
What is ultrasound able to assess dynamically in the shoulder?
subacromial impingement, subcoracoid impingement, and biceps tendon subluxation dynamically. Dynamic compression of rotator cuff tears can aid in the assessment of cuff integrity.
What is MRI more useful at assessing in the shoulder?
instability, ligamentous injury, or suspected glenoid labral injury
When should xray be used?
Ultrasound is also of limited value in the evaluation of bony disorders, and plain radiography should be considered.
Ultrasound can be used to assess a long list of shoulder pathology. Name 5
• Rotator cuff tears • Full-thickness tear • Partial-thickness tear • Rotator cuff tendinopathy • Tendinitis • Calcific tendinitis • Mucoid degeneration • Attrition Effusions/synovitis • Subacromiodeltoid bursa • Subacromial impingement • Glenohumeral effusion • Long biceps tendon sheath • "Geyser" sign of acromioclavicular joint • Long head of the biceps tendon • Tenosynovitis • Tendinitis • Subluxations (see notes for more)
What history should you gather before commencing a shoulder scan?
How would you ergonomically scan a shoulder?
What three categories should be used to describe tears?
Thickness, size, location
What are the different ways of describing the thickness of a supraspinatus tear?
• complete • full thickness • partial thickness o articular surface o bursal surface o insubstance/delamination
How do you describe the size of a supraspinatus tear?
• measure length x width
How do you describe the location of a supraspinatus tear?
* describe as proximal, mid or insertional (distal)
What is a global tear?
A shoulder which has tears in a number of tendons
Describe the possible appearances of a full thickness supraspinatus tear
What can make visualisation and demonstration of the full thickness tear difficult?
How can dynamic assessment help in classifying a full thickness tear?
one may be uncertain as to whether abnormal echotexture in the location of the rotator cuff represents a partial tear or a full-thickness tear with intervening granulation tissue and debris. Dynamic compression of the abnormal area may clarify this confusion by causing complex fluid and debris to swirl within the rotator cuff tear.
What is the cartilage interface sign?
• Fluid within the tear gap my accentuate visualization of the underlying humeral head articular cartilage owing to enhanced through transmission of the ultrasound beam, referred to as the “cartilage interface sign”
What are some ways of differentiating acute from chronic tears?
the findings of glenohumeral and bursal effusions are more common in acute tears.
Midsubstance tears, medial to the bone-tendon junction, are more likely to be acute
Severely retracted tears are more likely to be chronic.
What is one aspect of full thickness chronic tears that may make diagnosis difficult?
In chronic full-thickness tears, the tendon gap may be filled with noncompressible, complex echogenic debris and granulation tissue that are contiguous with the subacromial subdeltoid bursa, and this may give the false impression of rotator cuff volume