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General Orthopaedics

ASSESSMENT OF ENGAGING HILL-SACHS LESIONS WITH CT 3D RECONSTRUCTION AND A BIOMECHANICAL APPROACH

The Canadian Orthopaedic Association (COA) and The International Combined Orthopaedic Research Societies (ICORS) Meeting, Montreal, Canada, June 2019. Part 2.



Abstract

Anterior shoulder instability is associated with osseous defects of the glenoid and/or humeral head (Hill-Sachs lesions). These defects can contribute to the pathology of instability by engaging together. There is a need to continue to develop methods to preoperatively identify engaging Hill-Sachs lesions for determining appropriate surgical management.

The objective was to created a working moveable 3D CT model that allows the user to move the shoulder joint into various positions to assess the relationship between the Hill-Sachs lesion and the anterior glenoid rim. This technique was applied to a cohort series of 14 patients with recurrent anterior dislocation: 4 patients had undergone osteoarticular allografting of Hill-Sachs lesions and 10 control patients had undergone CT scanning to quantify bone loss but had no treatment to address bony pathology. A biomechanical analysis was performed to rotate each 3D model using local coordinate systems through a functional range using an open-source 3D animation program, Blender (Amsterdam, Netherlands). A Hill-Sachs lesion was considered “dynamically” engaging if the angle between the lesion's long axis and anterior glenoid was parallel.

In the classical vulnerable position of the shoulder (abduction=90, external rotation=0–135), none of the Hill-Sachs lesions aligned with the anterior glenoid in any of our patients (Figure 1). Therefore, we considered there to be a “low risk” of engagement in these critical positions, as the non-parallel orientation represents a lack of true articular arc mismatch and is unlikely to produce joint instability. We then expanded our search and simulated shoulder positions throughout a physiological range of motion for all groups and found that 100% of the allograft patients and 70% of the controls had positions producing alignment and were “high risk” of engagement (p = 0.18) (Table 1). We also found that the allograft group had a greater number of positions that would engage (mean 4 ± 1 positions of engagement) compared to our controls (mean 2 ± 2 positions of engagement, p = 0.06).

We developed a 3D animated paradigm to dynamically and non-invasively visualize a patient's anatomy and determine the clinical significance of a Hill-Sachs lesion using open source software and CT images. The technique demonstrated in this series of patients showed multiple shoulder positions that align the Hill-Sachs and glenoid axes that do not necessarily meet the traditional definition of engagement. Identifying all shoulder positions at risk of “engaging”, in a broader physiological range, may have critical implications towards selecting the appropriate surgical management of bony defects. We do not claim to doubt the classic conceptual definition of engagement, but we merely introduce a technique that accounts for the dynamic component of shoulder motion, and in doing so, avoid limitations of a static criteria assumed traditional definition (like size and location of lesion). Further investigations are planned and will help to further validate the clinical utility of this method.

For any figures or tables, please contact the authors directly.


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