Journal of shoulder and elbow surgery
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The purpose of this study is to determine the surgical anatomy and innervation pattern of the branches of the axillary nerve and discuss the clinical importance of the presented findings. We dissected 30 shoulders in 15 fixed adult cadavers under a microscope through anterior and posterior approaches. The axillary nerve was examined in 2 segments in relation to the underlying subscapularis muscle. ⋯ The posterior part of the deltoid muscle was observed to be innervated in 3 different patterns. The posterior part of the deltoid was innervated from the branch or branches coming only from the posterior branch in 70% of cases, from the anterior and posterior branches in 26.7% of cases, and from the anterior branch in 3.3% of cases. The findings of this study are useful for identifying each of the branches of the axillary nerve and have implications for surgeries related with selective innervation.
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J Shoulder Elbow Surg · Mar 2007
Acute rotator cuff tear: do we miss the early diagnosis? A prospective study showing a high incidence of rotator cuff tears after shoulder trauma.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the epidemiologic data of patients with an acute soft-tissue injury to the shoulder, with an emphasis on improving the early diagnosis of acute rotator cuff tears. This study included 104 patients, with a median age of 49 years (range, 19-75 years). The patients were evaluated clinically and with ultrasonography at a median of 13 days (range, 3-49 days) after the injury. ⋯ Of these patients, 33 (32%) had a full-thickness rotator cuff tear, 14 (13%) had a partial-thickness cuff tear in the tendon substance, and 13 (13%) had a partial cuff tear at the insertion site on the major tubercle. The injury mechanism or activity at the moment of injury did not correlate with the presence of a rotator cuff lesion, but we found a strong age correlation, with a prevalence of any rotator cuff tear, above 50%, for patients aged above 50 years and with a prevalence of full-thickness tears of 50% in the groups aged 50 to 59 years and aged 60 to 69 years. In conclusion, this study found a high incidence of rotator cuff lesions by further evaluation of patients undergoing consultation at the emergency department, with an inability to perform active abduction above 90 degrees and normal radiographs, after an acute shoulder trauma.