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Paper 05: Inferior Hill-Sachs Position Predicts Failure Following Primary Bankart Repair for On-Track Lesions

OBJECTIVES: The on-track/off-track concept for shoulder instability primarily describes the medial-lateral rotational relationship between an engaging Hill-Sachs lesion and a Bankart defect. Though clinically more protective, on-track lesions retain some risk for failure following primary arthroscop...

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Autores principales: Fox, Michael, Fatora, Gabrielle, Reddy, Rajiv, Barrow, Aaron, Charles, Shaquille, Lesniak, Bryson, Rodosky, Mark, Hughes, Jonathan, Popchak, Adam, Lin, Albert, Cong, Ting
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10392364/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967123S00031
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author Fox, Michael
Fatora, Gabrielle
Reddy, Rajiv
Barrow, Aaron
Charles, Shaquille
Lesniak, Bryson
Rodosky, Mark
Hughes, Jonathan
Popchak, Adam
Lin, Albert
Cong, Ting
author_facet Fox, Michael
Fatora, Gabrielle
Reddy, Rajiv
Barrow, Aaron
Charles, Shaquille
Lesniak, Bryson
Rodosky, Mark
Hughes, Jonathan
Popchak, Adam
Lin, Albert
Cong, Ting
author_sort Fox, Michael
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: The on-track/off-track concept for shoulder instability primarily describes the medial-lateral rotational relationship between an engaging Hill-Sachs lesion and a Bankart defect. Though clinically more protective, on-track lesions retain some risk for failure following primary arthroscopic Bankart repair. While some of this risk can be explained by the “near-track” concept, the role of the superior-inferior position of the Hill-Sachs lesion has never been studied in the context of failure of primary Bankart repair. This study aims to identify the relationship between the superior-inferior position of a Hill-Sachs lesion and risk for failure following primary arthroscopic bankart repair. Our hypothesis is that inferiorly-based Hill-Sachs lesions may engage with the arm in neutral and thus be higher risk for failure following primary Bankart repair. METHODS: We performed a retrospective analysis of 201 individuals with on track lesions who underwent primary arthroscopic Bankart repair (without remplissage) between 2007 and 2019 who have minimum 2 year follow-up. Patients with failure were defined as those who sustained a dislocation or subluxation after the index procedure. A pre-operative sagittal MRI cut showing the maximum Hill-Sachs diameter was used for position analysis. Sagittal position of the Hill-Sachs was defined the angle formed by the Hill-Sachs bisecting line through the humeral head center, against the mid-humeral axis on a sagittal MRI cut (Figure 1); for example, an angle of 0 is twelve o’clock on the humeral head, while an angle of 90 is equatorial. We defined a priori four Hill-Sachs quadrants for semi-quantitative analysis, based on physiologic arm positions: Superior (angle < 40), Mid-Superior (40-60), Mid (61-90), and Inferior (>90). Hill-Sachs quadrants were then correlated against failure following primary arthroscopic Bankart repair. RESULTS: Failure rates following arthroscopic bankart repair as it relates to superior-inferior position of the Hill-Sachs lesion is as follows (Table 1): No Hill-Sachs (10 of 73, 13.7%), Superior (0 of 7, 0%), mid-superior (6 of 36, 16.7%), Mid (19 of 71, 26.8%), and Inferior (1 of 6, 16.7%). We grouped Hill-Sachs lesions into low grade (No Hill-Sachs, Superior, and Mid-Superior quadrants) and high grade (Mid and Inferior quadrants). Low grade represented a 13.8% risk of failure, while High grade represented a 26% risk for failure (p=0.034). CONCLUSIONS: The superior-inferior sagittal position of a Hill-Sachs lesion may contribute to risk for failure of primary arthroscopic Bankart repair for on-track lesions. Inferiorly-based Hill-Sachs lesions may risk engagement at lower degrees of arm abduction, and in our study represent nearly double the risk of failure of arthroscopic Bankart repair as compared to superior Hill-Sachs positions.
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spelling pubmed-103923642023-08-02 Paper 05: Inferior Hill-Sachs Position Predicts Failure Following Primary Bankart Repair for On-Track Lesions Fox, Michael Fatora, Gabrielle Reddy, Rajiv Barrow, Aaron Charles, Shaquille Lesniak, Bryson Rodosky, Mark Hughes, Jonathan Popchak, Adam Lin, Albert Cong, Ting Orthop J Sports Med Article OBJECTIVES: The on-track/off-track concept for shoulder instability primarily describes the medial-lateral rotational relationship between an engaging Hill-Sachs lesion and a Bankart defect. Though clinically more protective, on-track lesions retain some risk for failure following primary arthroscopic Bankart repair. While some of this risk can be explained by the “near-track” concept, the role of the superior-inferior position of the Hill-Sachs lesion has never been studied in the context of failure of primary Bankart repair. This study aims to identify the relationship between the superior-inferior position of a Hill-Sachs lesion and risk for failure following primary arthroscopic bankart repair. Our hypothesis is that inferiorly-based Hill-Sachs lesions may engage with the arm in neutral and thus be higher risk for failure following primary Bankart repair. METHODS: We performed a retrospective analysis of 201 individuals with on track lesions who underwent primary arthroscopic Bankart repair (without remplissage) between 2007 and 2019 who have minimum 2 year follow-up. Patients with failure were defined as those who sustained a dislocation or subluxation after the index procedure. A pre-operative sagittal MRI cut showing the maximum Hill-Sachs diameter was used for position analysis. Sagittal position of the Hill-Sachs was defined the angle formed by the Hill-Sachs bisecting line through the humeral head center, against the mid-humeral axis on a sagittal MRI cut (Figure 1); for example, an angle of 0 is twelve o’clock on the humeral head, while an angle of 90 is equatorial. We defined a priori four Hill-Sachs quadrants for semi-quantitative analysis, based on physiologic arm positions: Superior (angle < 40), Mid-Superior (40-60), Mid (61-90), and Inferior (>90). Hill-Sachs quadrants were then correlated against failure following primary arthroscopic Bankart repair. RESULTS: Failure rates following arthroscopic bankart repair as it relates to superior-inferior position of the Hill-Sachs lesion is as follows (Table 1): No Hill-Sachs (10 of 73, 13.7%), Superior (0 of 7, 0%), mid-superior (6 of 36, 16.7%), Mid (19 of 71, 26.8%), and Inferior (1 of 6, 16.7%). We grouped Hill-Sachs lesions into low grade (No Hill-Sachs, Superior, and Mid-Superior quadrants) and high grade (Mid and Inferior quadrants). Low grade represented a 13.8% risk of failure, while High grade represented a 26% risk for failure (p=0.034). CONCLUSIONS: The superior-inferior sagittal position of a Hill-Sachs lesion may contribute to risk for failure of primary arthroscopic Bankart repair for on-track lesions. Inferiorly-based Hill-Sachs lesions may risk engagement at lower degrees of arm abduction, and in our study represent nearly double the risk of failure of arthroscopic Bankart repair as compared to superior Hill-Sachs positions. SAGE Publications 2023-07-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10392364/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967123S00031 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This open-access article is published and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - No Derivatives License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits the noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction of the article in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. You may not alter, transform, or build upon this article without the permission of the Author(s). For article reuse guidelines, please visit SAGE’s website at http://www.sagepub.com/journals-permissions.
spellingShingle Article
Fox, Michael
Fatora, Gabrielle
Reddy, Rajiv
Barrow, Aaron
Charles, Shaquille
Lesniak, Bryson
Rodosky, Mark
Hughes, Jonathan
Popchak, Adam
Lin, Albert
Cong, Ting
Paper 05: Inferior Hill-Sachs Position Predicts Failure Following Primary Bankart Repair for On-Track Lesions
title Paper 05: Inferior Hill-Sachs Position Predicts Failure Following Primary Bankart Repair for On-Track Lesions
title_full Paper 05: Inferior Hill-Sachs Position Predicts Failure Following Primary Bankart Repair for On-Track Lesions
title_fullStr Paper 05: Inferior Hill-Sachs Position Predicts Failure Following Primary Bankart Repair for On-Track Lesions
title_full_unstemmed Paper 05: Inferior Hill-Sachs Position Predicts Failure Following Primary Bankart Repair for On-Track Lesions
title_short Paper 05: Inferior Hill-Sachs Position Predicts Failure Following Primary Bankart Repair for On-Track Lesions
title_sort paper 05: inferior hill-sachs position predicts failure following primary bankart repair for on-track lesions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10392364/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967123S00031
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