Erschienen in:
29.03.2016 | Shoulder
Drilling through lateral transmuscular portal lowers the risk of suprascapular nerve injury during arthroscopic SLAP repair
verfasst von:
Baris Kocaoglu, Tekin Kerem Ulku, Safiye Sayilir, Mehmet Ugur Ozbaydar, Alp Bayramoglu, Mustafa Karahan
Erschienen in:
Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy
|
Ausgabe 10/2017
Einloggen, um Zugang zu erhalten
Abstract
Purpose
The aim of our study was to evaluate the risk of medial glenoid perforation and possible injury to suprascapular nerve during arthroscopic SLAP repair using lateral transmuscular portal.
Methods
Ten cadaveric shoulder girdles were isolated and drilled at superior glenoid rim from both anterior–superior portal (1 o’clock) and lateral transmuscular portal (12 o’clock) for SLAP repairs. Drill hole depth was determined by the manufacturer’s drill stop (20 mm), and any subsequent drill perforations through the medial bony surface of the glenoid were directly confirmed by dissection. The bone tunnel depth and subsequent distance to the suprascapular nerve, scapular height and width, were compared for investigated locations.
Results
Four perforations out of ten (40 %) occurred through anterior–superior portal with one associated nerve injury. One perforation out of ten (10 %) occurred through lateral transmuscular portal without any nerve injury. The mean depth was calculated as 17.6 mm (SD 3) for anterior–superior portal and 26.5 mm (SD 3.6) for lateral transmuscular portal (P < 0.001).
Conclusions
It is anatomically possible that suprascapular nerve could sustain iatrogenic injury during labral anchor placement during SLAP repair. However, lateral transmuscular portal at 12 o’clock drill entry location has lower risk of suprascapular nerve injury compared with anterior–superior portal at 1 o’clock drill entry location.