Shoulder Flashcards
What is another name for the shoulder, and what does it consist of?
The glenohumeral joint, it consists of a ball and socket joint that is formed by the humeral head and scapular glenoid.
What forms the shoulder girdle?
Formed by the scapula, clavicle, proximal humerus and the supporting muscles including the deltoid and muscles of the rotator cuff.
What are the 4 muscles of the rotator cuff?
Infraspinatus
Subscapularis
Supraspinatus
Teres minor
What is the function of each of the rotator cuff muscles?
Supraspinatus - abduction of the arm.
Infraspinatus and teres minor - external rotation.
Subscapularis - internal rotation
Where is the great and lesser tuberosity located?
Greater tuberosity is located lateral to the humeral head.
Lesser tuberosity is located located inferiorly and on the anterior part of the humerus.
What shoulder pain problems are usually present in each age group?
Young - shoulder instability
Middle aged - rotator cuff tears and frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis)
Elderly - glenohumeral osteoarthritis predominates.
What is impingement syndrome?
Where tendons of the rotator cuff (mainly the supraspinatus) are compressed in the tight subacromial space during movement resulting in pain.
What test is used to confirm impingement syndrome?
patients will commonly present wiith painful arc at around 60-120 degrees of abduction. This is due to an inflamed area of the supraspinatus tendon passing through the subacromial space.
What can impingement occur as a result of?
Subacromial bursitis, acromioclavicular OA with inferior osteophyte formation and hooked acromion rotator cuff tear.
What test can be used to replicate impingement syndrome pain?
Pain from impingement usually radiates to the deltoid and upper arm. May be tender at the lateral edge of the acromion. Hawkins - kennedy test can recreate this pain.
How are most cases of impingement syndrome managed?
Analgesics, NSAID’s, physiotherapy and subacromial steroid injections.
Another name for adhesive capsulitis?
Frozen shoulder
What is the main clinical sign of a frozen shoulder?
Loss of external rotation
What are the 2 distinct types of shoulder instability?
Traumatic = patients can suffer a traumatic anterior dislocation which, after reduction, can settle and stabilise with rest and physiotherapy. In some individuals there is no stabilisation, leading to recurrent dislocations/subluxations, typically at minimal force.
Atraumatic = those with generalised ligamentous laxity (e.g., Ehlers danlos syndrome or Marfan’s syndrome) can occur from recurrent multidirectional subluxations/dislocations.
What is more common, posterior or anterior shoulder dislocations?
Anterior shoulder dislocations are most common.