| Literature DB >> 34258042 |
Silvia Tortora1, Carmelo Messina2, Salvatore Gitto3, Vito Chianca4,5, Francesca Serpi1, Angelo Gambino2, Luigi Pedone2, Gianpaolo Carrafiello6,7, Luca Maria Sconfienza2,3, Domenico Albano2,8.
Abstract
Ultrasound is a fast, accessible, reliable, and radiation-free imaging modality routinely used to assess the soft tissues around the shoulder. It enables to identify a wide range of pathological conditions. Furthermore, most ultrasound-guided musculoskeletal interventional procedures around the shoulder produce better results in terms of accuracy and clinical efficacy than those performed in a blinded fashion. Indeed, intra-articular and peri-articular interventional procedures can be easily performed under continuous ultrasound monitoring to ensure the correct position of the needle and to deliver the medication to a specific target. Several technical approaches and medications can be used to treat different causes of painful shoulder. Intra-articular injections are applied to treat acromioclavicular osteoarthritis as well as glenohumeral joint osteoarthritis and adhesive capsulitis. Subacromial-subdeltoid bursitis, either presenting as a primary inflammatory condition or secondary to rotator cuff disorders, can be easily approached using ultrasound guidance to aspirate synovial effusion and to inject medications. Ultrasound-guided percutaneous irrigation is a well-established technique increasingly applied to treat patients with rotator cuff calcific tendinopathy. Also, degenerative rotator cuff tendinopathy can be conservatively treated by image-guided interventions, specifically with needling under ultrasound guidance that can be associated with injections of platelet-rich plasma. Lastly, periarticular peripheral nerve block can be quickly and safely performed under ultrasound guidance, particularly in conditions involving the suprascapular nerve in the setting of pre-operative analgesia or pain treatment in glenohumeral osteoarthritis and adhesive capsulitis. In this article, the most common ultrasound-guided procedures around the shoulder have been reviewed to discuss indications and techniques. © Polish Ultrasound Society. Published by Medical Communications Sp. z o.o.Entities:
Keywords: injections; interventional radiology; shoulder; ultrasound
Year: 2021 PMID: 34258042 PMCID: PMC8264815 DOI: 10.15557/JoU.2021.0026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ultrason ISSN: 2084-8404
Fig. 1.Ultrasound-guided ACJ injection. A. The patient is seated with the arm relaxed, and a high-frequency linear transducer is positioned in the longitudinal plane parallel to the clavicula above the ACJ to visualize the joint space, with needle insertion at the probe midpoint. B. The corresponding ultrasound image shows the needle inserted into the ACJ with the out-of-plane technique; with the corticosteroid (arrowheads) spreading within the joint from the needle tip (arrow)
Fig. 2.Ultrasound-guided GHJ injection with the posterior approach and in-plane technique. A. The patient is in prone position, and the transducer is placed on the posterior GHJ recess parallel to the long axis of the infraspinatus muscle. B. The corresponding ultrasound image shows the needle (arrows) introduced in the lateral-to-medial direction and placed into the posterior recess. C. A mixture of a corticosteroid and anesthetic (asterisks) is injected into the GHJ space
Fig. 3.Ultrasound-guided GHJ injection with the posterior approach and out-of-plane technique. A. The patient is in prone position, and the transducer is placed parallel to the long axis of the infraspinatus muscle at the level of the posterior GHJ recess. B. The corresponding ultrasound image shows the needle (arrows) inserted into the GHJ space with the most medial part of the humeral head as a target. G – glenoid, H – humerus
Fig. 4.Ultrasound-guided SASD bursa injection. A. The patient is seated in neutral position, and a high-frequency linear transducer is placed on the shoulder parallel to the long axis of the supraspinatus tendon to visualize the SASD bursa. B. The corresponding ultrasound image shows the needle (arrows) inserted obliquely with the in-plane technique and lateral-to-medial direction, with the needle tip placed into the bursa (asterisks)
Fig. 5.Ultrasound-guided percutaneous irrigation of calcific tendinopathy with the single-needle procedure. A. The patient is in supine position, and a high-frequency linear transducer is placed to visualize the calcification in its long axis. B. The corresponding ultrasound image shows the needle (arrows) inserted with the in-plane technique and the calcification (star)
Fig. 6.Ultrasound-guided LHBTT sheath injection. A. The patient is in supine position, with the arm in external rotation, and a high-frequency linear transducer is placed in the short axis of the LHBTT to visualize the tendon in the intertubercular groove. B. The corresponding ultrasound image shows the needle (arrows) inserted into the LHBTT sheath (asterisk) with the in-plane approach and lateral-to-medial direction