Literature DB >> 12728041

Comparison of arthroscopic findings with magnetic resonance imaging and arthrography in children with glenohumeral deformities secondary to brachial plexus birth palsy.

Michael L Pearl1, Bradford W Edgerton, Darissa S Kon, Ani B Darakjian, Anne E Kosco, Paul B Kazimiroff, Raoul J Burchette.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Characterization of glenohumeral deformities secondary to brachial plexus birth palsy with plain radiography is difficult because the glenohumeral joint does not completely ossify until puberty. The purpose of this study was to compare the findings on magnetic resonance imaging and arthrography with those on arthroscopy to better understand the roles of these methods in the evaluation of glenohumeral development in this condition.
METHODS: Eighty-four children who ranged in age from seven months to thirteen years and six months had glenohumeral arthrography while they were under general anesthesia for operative treatment of an internal rotation contracture. Thirty-six children also received magnetic resonance imaging with use of cartilage-sensitive axial gradient-echo sequences. Thirty-seven children were evaluated arthroscopically.
RESULTS: Arthrography showed a concentric glenohumeral joint in thirty-three children, a flat glenoid in eight, a biconcave glenoid in seventeen, and a pseudoglenoid in twenty-six. Thus, 61% (fifty-one) of the eighty-four children with an internal rotation contracture had a substantial deformity. The severity of the contracture was associated with the existence and the type of the deformity (p = 0.001). Magnetic resonance imaging showed greater detail than arthrography did in defining the severity of the deformity in both the glenoid and the humeral head. The thirty-seven children who were examined arthroscopically showed a progression from those who had a concentric, conforming joint to those who had a markedly deformed joint with a bifurcated glenoid and a flattened, oval-shaped humeral head that articulated with the posterior aspect of the glenoid. Irregularities and cavitation of the anterior aspect of the glenoid were common. The subscapularis and rotator interval tissue were the primary sites of contracture.
CONCLUSIONS: Profound glenohumeral deformities secondary to brachial plexus birth palsy are commonly seen within the first two years of life. The information provided by imaging studies is helpful in defining the natural history of this condition and in determining the success of surgical intervention.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12728041     DOI: 10.2106/00004623-200305000-00018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am        ISSN: 0021-9355            Impact factor:   5.284


  15 in total

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8.  Risk factors at birth for permanent obstetric brachial plexus injury and associated osseous deformities.

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9.  Extended long-term (5 years) outcomes of triangle tilt surgery in obstetric brachial plexus injury.

Authors:  Rahul K Nath; Chandra Somasundaram
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10.  An MRI study on the relations between muscle atrophy, shoulder function and glenohumeral deformity in shoulders of children with obstetric brachial plexus injury.

Authors:  Valerie M van Gelein Vitringa; Ed O van Kooten; Margriet G Mullender; Mirjam H van Doorn-Loogman; Johannes A van der Sluijs
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