| Literature DB >> 35317253 |
Kosuke Kuratani1, Makoto Tanaka2, Hiroto Hanai3, Kenji Hayashida4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intra-articular glenohumeral joint injections are essential procedures for treating various shoulder disorders. Fluoroscopy-guided injections have been extensively used; however, they pose a risk of radiation exposure and are expensive and time-consuming. Recently, it has been suggested that ultrasound-guided injections are accurate and cost effective procedures. AIM: To evaluate the accuracy of ultrasound-guided glenohumeral injections using a posterior approach that is confirmed using magnetic resonance arthrography (MRA).Entities:
Keywords: Glenohumeral injections; Magnetic resonance arthrography; Shoulder injections; Ultrasound guidance
Year: 2022 PMID: 35317253 PMCID: PMC8935327 DOI: 10.5312/wjo.v13.i3.259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Orthop ISSN: 2218-5836
Figure 1Classification of the transverse relaxation (T2)-weighted images of magnetic resonance arthrography into three groups. No leakage: Right shoulder injection into the glenohumeral joint without leakage; Minor leakage: Practical intra-articular right shoulder injection; however, another magnetic resonance arthrography image shows the presence of some leakage (white arrow) outside the posterior cuff; Major leakage: Inaccurate injection into the glenohumeral joint of the right shoulder with a noted severe/mass leakage (white arrow) surrounding the axillary area.
Figure 2The setting of the injection procedure. Glenohumeral injection performed by a shoulder surgeon using ultrasonic guidance. The patient sits upright with the shoulder at a neutral rotation position, and the ultrasonic probe is placed over the posterior part of the right shoulder.
Figure 3Identification of the glenohumeral joint and needle insertion point on a captured ultrasound image. A: The gap between the humeral head (H) and glenoid rim (G) is the target of this injection. The needle insertion point (asterisk) should be visualized more clearly; B: Ultrasonographic image during injection; C: Arrowhead shows the high echoic flow of the injection and arrow line indicates the assumed needle path.
The accuracy of the injections
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| Right | 94 (91.3%) | 7 (6.8%) | 2 (1.9%) | 103 |
| Left | 69 (90.1%) | 3 (3.9%) | 4 (5.3%) | 76 |
| Total | 163 (91.0%) | 10 (5.6%) | 6 (3.4%) | 179 |
No leakage: Injection into the glenohumeral joint without any leakage; Minor leakage: Practical intra-articular right shoulder injection; however, another magnetic resonance arthrography image shows the presence of some leakage outside the posterior cuff; Major leakage: Inaccurate injection into the glenohumeral joint with a noted mass leakage. Right: Right shoulders; Left: Left shoulders.
Figure 4Learning curve. The inaccurate injection rate is the total number of “major leakage” divided by the total number of injected cases that was recorded every 10 cases. The learning curve is represented by the dotted curve. Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient was analyzed (R2 = 0.887, P < 0.001).