Erschienen in:
01.09.2011 | 50 Years Ago in CORR
50 Years Ago in CORR: Arthrography of the Shoulder Joint Robert L. Samilson MD, Robert L. Raphaël MD, Lawrence Post MD, Charles Noonan MD, Evelyn Siris MD, and Frank L. Raney Jr, MD CORR 1961;20:21–32
verfasst von:
Richard A. Brand, MD
Erschienen in:
Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research®
|
Ausgabe 9/2011
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Excerpt
The diagnosis and understanding of shoulder disorders has advanced dramatically in recent years. As with most human disorders, such as the many forms of arthritis [
1], the number of known separate entities has increased over time. This increase is in part due to new and evolving diagnostic techniques. Arthroscopy of the shoulder joint was described by Burman in 1931 [
2]. Burman claimed to have examined over 90 joints in adults and children, including examinations of the wrist, elbow, hip, knee, and ankle. The technique did not gain widespread use until the 1970s when instrumentation had substantially improved. (Obtaining sufficiently bright light bulbs, for example, was a problem eventually solved by fiber optics). The introduction of MRI in the 1970s [
3,
4] was followed in the 80s with application of the technique to study the normal shoulder [
5] and, shortly thereafter, to identify rotator cuff tears [
7,
8]. With increasing refinement of the sequences and the ability to distinguish tissues with higher and higher resolution, MRI has allowed researchers and clinicians to noninvasively identify abnormalities not previously possible. …