2.problem of Shoulder and Elbow
2.problem of Shoulder and Elbow
2.problem of Shoulder and Elbow
and Elbow
Shakeel Sarwar
Department of Orthopedics
Zhongda Hospital, Southeast University
Shoulder
Goals
Review pertinent anatomy of
the shoulder
Discuss common shoulder
problems
Focus on history and physical
examination of the shoulder
Review of shoulder anatomy
Bones
Scapula
Clavicle
Humeral head
Joints
Sternoclavicular
Acromioclavicular
Glenohumeral
Scapulothoracic
Glenohumeral joint
Very mobile
Price: instability
Acromioclavicular
Glenohumeral
Superior GH
Middle GH
Inferior GH
Coracohumeral
The dynamic stability mechanism
Pain
Weakness
Stiff
Instability
Limit the ability to perform many routine activity
Athletic injuries
Shoulder: 8-13% of all
athletic injuries
Patient investigation
Age, Gender
Occupation
Risk factors for shoulder disorders
Lifting heavy loads
Prolonged elevation of the upper limb(s)
Repetitive movements in awkward positions
General health condition
Significant comorbidities
Diabetes, stroke, cancer>>>>>>
Focused History
The history of injury
Focused history
Mechanism of Injury
Helps predict injured structure
Sleeping difficulty
Difficulty sleeping on effected side
Impingement
Rotator cuff tear
AC joint disease
Frozen shoulder
Rare: Glenohumeral arthritis,
contusion, infection.
Physical Exam - General
Inspection
Palpation
Strength testing
Special tests
Inspection
Palpation
Along clavicle
SC and AC joints
Acromion, subacromial region
Coracoid process (short head of biceps)
Bicipital groove (long head of biceps)
Trigger points in neck, trapezius, scapular
region
Palpation of AC Joint
Patient sitting,
beginning with the arm
straight
Patient actively flexes
biceps muscle while
examiner provides
supination and ER
Examiner palpates the
bicipital groove for pain
Range of Motion (ROM)
Flexion
Extension
Strength Tests*
External rotation
Infraspinatus
Teres minor
Internal rotation
Subscapularis
Strength tests
Nothing is diagnostic
Plain films not necessary
Get if chronic or recurrent
Might see calcifications
If significant loss of strength or ROM, get
MRI
Rule out tear
Hard to see tendon calcifications
Tx of tendonitis
Rest
Heat or ice
Ultrasound (physical therapy)
NSAIDs
Subacromial steroid injection
Rotator cuff tear
50% pts do not have preceding
trauma
Usually in supraspinatus
Wide size range, plus partial vs full
Shoulder weakness, pain, loss of
motion
Common mechanisms of injury:
Falling onto outstretched arm, onto
outer shoulder directly, heavy
pushing/pulling
Sx of rotator cuff tear
Shoulder weakness
Localized pain over upper back
Popping/catching sensation when shoulder is
moved
Night pain is characteristic
Range of motion
Strength
Drop arm test
Arm abducted with elbow straight
See if pt can smoothly lower arm
If arm drops, then test is positive for tear
Highly specific but only 21% sensitive
Radiology for rotator cuff tears
Interpret carefully
34% asymptomatic pts (all ages) and 54% pts >60
yo have partial rotator cuff tears
Abnormal rotator cuff signal after trauma may
represent strain rather than tear
X-rays
Look for high riding humeral head
Ultrasound
Highly operator dependent
MRI
Rotator cuff tears
Tx of rotator cuff tears
Clinical diagnosis
Range of motion is smooth and pain-free,
then stops suddenly
No further passive ROM possible
Normal strength in the pain-free range
Can test strength again after lidocaine
injection
Radiology for adhesive capsulitis
Frozen shoulder
(contracted GH capsule)
Tx of adhesive capsulitis
Watchful waiting
Up to 2 years for resolution
Incomplete recovery more likely in pts with DM, or pts
with >50% loss of external rotation/abduction
Steroid injection
Manipulation under anesthesia
Gentle exercise
Pain medications
Alternative therapies – i.e. acupuncture
Biceps tendonitis
Tendon rupture
Speed’s test
Speed’s Test - Biceps tendon
Tennis elbow
Golf elbow
Definition:
1-2% population
Aetiology
Incompletely understood
Acute injury
Epicondylitis
Chronic injury
Epicondylosis
Repetitive micro-tearing
Tendinosis
Mucoid
degeneration
Loss of collagen
tight bundled
structure
Fibrosis
Neo-vascularisation
Presentation
Pain
Weakness
Difficulty opening
door handles
Difficulty shaking
hands
Examination
Pain on palpation
Resisted elbow
extension
Resisted middle
finger extension
Treatment
Non-operative
Rest
NSAIDs
Physiotherapy
USS
Injection therapy
Operative
Tennis elbow
release
Reduce Elbow Stress
Physiotherapy
Stretching
Strengthening
Surgery as a last resort
Anterior Humeral
Line: This is
drawn along the
anterior humeral
cortex. It should
pass through the
middle of the
capitellum.
Radiograph Anatomy/Landmarks
The capitellum
is angulated
anteriorly about
30 degrees.
The
appearance of
the distal
humerus is
similar to a 30
hockey stick.
Radiograph Anatomy/Landmarks
Radiocapitellar
line – should
intersect the
capitellum
Make it a habit
to evaluate this
line on every
pediatric elbow
film
Associated Injuries
Type 1 Fractures: