Interactive Transcript
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<v ->Dr.P here talking SLAP 1,
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a more superficial lesion.
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The Snyder classification criteria is what we are
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using right now and I am showing you
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three water weighted images
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with a lot going on in the shoulder.
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Let's ignore all the other busyness that's happening here,
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including the pathology and the rotator cuff
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and some AC joint disease
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and some swelling down here.
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Let's go right to the supere labrum.
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there are actually two major points I want to make here.
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One, there are a lot of fissures and sulci
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or sulcuses that sit along the antero superior anatomy.
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For instance, this curvilinear,
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but very well defined area,
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but pretty smooth and curved on the top
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represents the superior labral sulcus.
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Then you might say, well, okay a SLAP 1 lesion
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is a superficial less than 50 percent depth fissure,
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and that could be it, right? But that is not it.
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If you scroll a little bit, you'll see that,
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that is the thicker between the biceps take off
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and the superior labral. So that's a normal recess.
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Then you have another one right here.
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Now that one's a little easier,
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but that's the coracohumeral ligament interfacing
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with the biceps with a little bit of fluid interpose,
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so you have one, two, three potential marauders,
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or masqueraders as SLAP 1 lesions, none of which is it.
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So let's keep scrolling, because we are showing a SLAP 1
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and here it comes into view.
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A very irregular, frayed, ill-defined pattern
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of signal alteration right there,
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that involves the underbelly of the supere labrum.
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And then as we scroll a little bit more we see another one.
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Another area of fraying right there.
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Looks a little bit like a (indistinct).
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Not very deep, doesn't come out the top,
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no cysts, not that well defined.
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This is what you see in a wear and tear phenomenon
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of SLAP 1 and, supportive is the presence
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of wear and tear disease elsewhere.
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You got some arthritis in the AC joint.
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You got some rotator cuff pathology.
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You got some pseudo cysts in the humeral head,
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which suggests that there's a little bit of bobbing
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of the humeral head up and down,
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a little bit of micro instability,
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which probably wears on the supere labrum
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as it goes up and down and pushes up against it,
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further propagating and fulfilling
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our diagnosis of SLAP 1.