The Shoulder. Shoulder Girdle Complex Glenohumeral joint Acromioclavicular joint Scapulothoracic...

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The Shoulder

Transcript of The Shoulder. Shoulder Girdle Complex Glenohumeral joint Acromioclavicular joint Scapulothoracic...

Page 1: The Shoulder. Shoulder Girdle Complex Glenohumeral joint Acromioclavicular joint Scapulothoracic joint.

The Shoulder

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Shoulder Girdle Complex

Glenohumeral jointAcromioclavicular jointScapulothoracic joint

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Glenohumeral JointGlenoid fossaHead of humerus

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Acromioclavicular JointAcromion process of

scapulaClavicle

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Scapulothoracic JointScapulaPosterior ribcage

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Bony Landmarks

SternumClavicleHumerus

◦ Head of humerus◦ Greater tubercle◦ Lesser tubercle◦ Bicipital groove◦ Epicondyles

Greater tubercle

Lesser tubercle

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Scapula ◦ Acromion◦ Coracoid process◦ Glenoid fossa◦ Spine

Bony Landmarks

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Shoulder Girdle

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Peer-Share-Review

Bones & Markings

Ready, Set, Go

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Muscles of the ShoulderDeltoidTrapeziusPectoralis MajorPectoralis MinorSerratus anterior

Rhomboid majorRhomboid minorLevator scapulaeCoracobrachialisBiceps brachii

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Deltoid◦ Abducts shoulder

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Trapezius◦ Rotates scapula

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Shoulder depressionScapular depression

Punching

Flex shoulderAdduct shoulder IR shoulder

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Rhomboid Major/Minor◦ Retract scapula◦ Elevate scapula

Levator Scapulae◦ Elevates scapula

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Flexes shoulderAdducts shoulder

Coracobrachialis

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Biceps BrachiiWeakly flexes

shoulderTwo proximal

heads◦ Long head—

supraglenoid tubercle of scapula

◦ Short head—coracoid process of scapula

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Rotator Cuff Muscles

Collective set of four deep muscles of the GH joint

Supraspinatus◦Abduction of the arm

Infraspinatus◦External Rotation of the shoulder

Teres Minor◦External rotation of the shoulder

Subscapularis◦Internal rotation of the shoulder

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Rotator Cuff Muscles

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Ligaments of the Shoulder

CoracoclavicularCoracoacromialCoracohumeralGlenohumeralAcromioclavicula

r

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Levator Scapula

Rhomboids Minor

Rhomboids Major

Acromioclavicular (AC) joint

Serratus Anterior

Trapezius

Deltoids

Infraspinatus

Teres Minor

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Pectoralis Major

Pectoralis Minor

Biceps (short & long head)

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Shoulder Impingement SyndromeWidely used term to describe

pain occurring when space between humeral head and acromion become narrowed

Bones “impinge” or compress structures that occupy the subacromial space

Three structures:◦Joint capsule◦Tendons of rotator cuff◦Bursa

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Impingement SyndromeOverhead sports

◦Baseball, tennis, swimming, volleyballSigns & Symptoms

◦Pain and tenderness in GH◦Pain and/or weakness with

active abduction in mid-range◦Limited IR◦Confirmation with special tests

Empty can

◦Point tenderness in subacromial area

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Impingement Syndrome—TreatmentAddress biomechanicsSubstitute with cross-training

until condition resolvesLimit excessive overhead

movementRehab exercises & stretching

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Rotator-Cuff Strain/Tears

Traumatic injury◦i.e. FOOSH

Unusual demands on young athleteRepetitive use leads to chronic

condition◦Ultimately tear in tendons

Partial thickness tear◦Not completely severe tendon◦May respond well to non-op treatment

Full thickness tear◦Require surgery

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Rotator-Cuff Strains/Tears- Signs & SymptomsPain with muscle contraction“Catching” sensation when arm

movedInability to sleep

on affected sideVarying degrees

of disabilityDecreased

strengthSwelling

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Rotator-Cuff Strains/Tears-TreatmentRICELimit activity - asymptomaticShoulder strengtheningProgressive RTP throwing

program

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Biceps TendonitisDiscomfort in

anterior shoulderOften confused

with RC tendonitisCan be caused by

impingement

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TRAUMATIC SHOULDER INJURIES

Common Injuries of the Shoulder

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Glenohumeral DislocationForced abduction,

external rotation of shoulder

Signs and Symptoms◦ Flattened deltoid◦ Pain and Swelling ◦ Disability

Requires immediate care by physician

Additionally injuries include:◦ Fractures◦ Glenoid labral

tears◦ Axillary nerve

damage

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Glenoid LabrumCartilaginous ring that acts to

keep the humeral head positioned on the glenoid by blocking unwanted movement

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Glenoid Labrum InjuriesInjury occur with :

◦ Acute trauma (dislocation)

◦ Repeated trauma Degenerated tear

(baseball pitchers)

◦ Repetitive subluxation Labral rim degenerate

over time

Signs & Symptoms◦ Pain◦ Catching or

popping sensation◦ Limited ROM◦ Varying degrees

of weakness◦ Special Tests◦ MRI

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SLAP TearSuperior Labrum

from Anterior to Posterior

Occurs at point where biceps tendon inserts on labrum

Area of relatively poor blood supply

FOOSHRepetitive

overhead actionsLifting a heavy

object

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Acromioclavicular Separation

Direct blow to tip of shoulder◦ FB player falling on

tip of shoulder or FOOSH

Signs & Symptoms◦ Pain in vicinity of

AC joint◦ Possible deformity

of joint depending on degree of sprain

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AC Separation—Treatment RICERehab

◦ ROM & strengthening as tolerated

◦ Overhead exs not recommended

2nd degree◦ 3-4 weeks immob◦ Most painful

3rd degree◦ 6-8 weeks immob◦ May leave

permanent deformity

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Acromioclavicular Separation

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Clavicle Fracture• Fall on tip of shouldero FOOSH

• Direct impact• Signs and Symptomso Pain, deformity, and swelling

• Refer to physician

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Brachial Plexus Injury

StingerBurnerOccurs when

head and neck forcibly moved/hit to one side

Nerves and brachial plexus compressed on that side

Painful and disabling

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Brachial PlexusGroup of

peripheral nervesLeave spinal cord

& extend from vertebrae into shoulder

Give arm ability to function

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Brachial Plexus Injury—Signs & SymptomsIntense pain from neck down to armArm will feel like it’s on fire or have

pins-and-needles sensationArm/hand may be weak and numbIntense pain in area of brachial

plexusSymptoms last several minutes to

several hours or moreWeakness may last for several days

◦ depends on severity of injury

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Brachial Plexus Injury—TreatmentResting neck/arm until pain &

symptoms go awayIce pack 20 minutes every 3-4

hoursAnti-inflammatoriesStrengthening exercisesRTP determined by sports

medicine staffSubsequent stingers cause for

further testing

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Brachial Plexus Injury—TreatmentChronic stingers may

eliminate athlete from contact sports

Scar tissue develops around nerve◦ ® Causes nerves to

become entrapped If athlete receives

another blow, brachial plexus may not be able to flex◦ shatters instead,

tearing major nerves of arm

◦ Causes permanent neurological damage

Avoid by:◦ Keeping neck and

shoulders as strong as possible

◦ Properly fitted equipment

◦ Proper tackling & blocking techniques

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SPECIAL TESTS

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Special Tests for ShoulderHawkin’s-Kennedy

ImpingementAnterior ApprehensionPiano SignApley’s ScratchEmpty CanDrop-arm Sign

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Hawkin’s-Kennedy• Seated

• Shoulder in 90 degrees of flexion, slight horizontal adduction, & maximal internal rotation

• (+) reproduction of pain• Subacromial

Impingement

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Drop Arm Sign

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Apprehension-relocation

• Supine with are @ 90 degrees of abduction & external rotation

• 1 had placed as a fulcrum just posterior to humeral head then passively move shoulder into maximal external rotation against fulcrum of other hand

• (+) reproduction of shoulder pain, or apprehension with movement• Glenohumeral

subluxlation

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Piano Key/Sign – AC Separation

• Seated or standing

• Clinician presses downward on elevated end of clavicle

• (+) pain or excessive movement of clavicle• AC separation

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Empty Can Test—Supraspinatus

• Seated

• Elevate UE to 30-45 degrees in plane of scapula with internal rotation (thumb down); resist elevation

• (+) pain & weakness

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Apley’s Scratch – shoulder mobility

• Sitting

• 3 part test1. Reach across

chest & place hand on opposite sholder

2. Reach overhead to place hand between scapula

3. Reach behind back as high as possible

*compare bilaterally

• (+) asymetrical motion1. Restriction in horizontal adduction, IR, scapular protraction2. Restriction I abduction, ER, scapular upward rotation and

elevation3. Restriction in adduction, IR, scapular downward rotation and

retraction

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