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Humeral Head Bone Defects: Remplissage, Allograft, and Arthroplasty

  • Autores: Marshal S. Armitage, Kenneth J. Faber, Darren S. Drosdowech, Robert B. Litchfield, George S. Athwal
  • Localización: Orthopedic Clinics of North America, ISSN 0030-5898, Vol. 41, Nº. 3, 2010, págs. 417-425
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • The Hill-Sachs lesion is a well-known entity that threatens recurrent instability, but the treatment options are multiple and the surgical indications remain undefined. The evidence for each operative technique is limited to retrospective reviews and small case series without controls. The decision of which technique to use resides with the surgeon. Older, osteopenic patients, especially those with underlying arthritis and large defects, should be managed with complete humeral resurfacing. Humeralplasty is best used in younger patients with good quality bone in an acute setting with small- to moderate-sized bone defects. Partial resurfacing and remplissage are best used with small to moderate lesions, and both require further study. Allograft humeral reconstruction is an established technique for patients with moderate to large defects, and is best applied to nonosteopenic bone. Surgeons must be able to recognize the presence of humeral bone loss via specialized radiographs or cross-sectional imaging and understand its implications. The techniques to manage humeral bone loss are evolving and further biomechanical and clinical studies are required to define the indications and treatment algorithms.


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