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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_34 | Pages 345 - 345
1 Dec 2013
Argintar E Heckmann N Wang L Tibone J Lee T
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Background:

Individuals with large Hill-Sachs lesions may be prone to failure and reoccurrence following standard arthroscopic Bankart repair. Here, the Remplissage procedure may promote shoulder stability through infraspinatus capsulo-tenodesis directly into the lesion. Little biomechanicaldata about the Remplissage procedure on glenohumeral kinematics, stability, and range of motion (ROM) currently exists.

Questions/purposes:

What are the biomechanical effects of Bankart and Remplissage repair for large Hill-Sachs lesions?


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 81-B, Issue 5 | Pages 926 - 929
1 Sep 1999
Greenbaum B Itamura J Vangsness CT Tibone J Atkinson R

We studied the origin of extensor carpi radialis brevis using 40 fresh frozen human cadaver specimens. Ten were stained with haematoxylin and eosin and trichrome which showed the collagenous structure of the extensor tendons at their origin. Gross anatomical observation showed that there was no definitive separation between brevis and communis at the osseotendinous junction. The histological findings confirmed the lack of separation between the two tendons. The extensor tendons were in close proximity to the joint capsule but trichrome staining showed no interdigitation of the tendon with the capsule. The validity of ascribing the pain of lateral epicondylitis to extensor carpi radialis brevis must be questioned. It appears to arise more from the ‘common extensor’ origin.