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www.fisiokinesiterapia.biz
Prevention and Care of
Athletic Injuries
Shoulder Evaluation and Injuries
Anatomy
Bony Anatomy
„
Sternum
„
„
Clavicle
„
„
„
Sternal (proximal) and acromial (distal) ends
Characteristic “s-shape”
Humerus
„
„
Manubrium, body, xiphoid process
Head, neck, greater/lesser tuberosity, bicipital (intertubercular)
groove, deltoid tuberosity
Scapula
„
Vertebral (medial)/axillary (lateral)/superior borders,
inferior/superior angles, coracoid/acromion processes, spine,
glenoid/supraspinous/infraspinous/subscapular fossas
Bony Anatomy
Bony Anatomy
Articulations
„
Sternoclavicular (SC) joint
„
„
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Acromioclavicular (AC) joint
„
„
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Distal clavicle and acromion process
Superior/inferior AC ligaments, coracoclavicular ligaments
Glenohumeral (GH) joint
„
„
„
„
Proximal clavicle and sternum
Anterior/posterior SC ligaments
Head of humerus and glenoid fossa of scapula
Joint capsule is primary ligamentous restraint
Reinforced by glenoid labrum
Scapulothoracic joint
„
Not a “true” joint, but significant for shoulder ROM
Articulations
Articulations
Muscular Anatomy
„
Muscles acting on the scapula
Rhomboid major/minor
„ Levator scapulae
„ Serratus anterior
„ Pectoralis major/minor
„ Trapezius
„ Latissimus dorsi
„
Muscular Anatomy
„
Muscles acting on the humerus
„
Rotator cuff (SITS)
„
„
„
„
„
„
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Supraspinatus, infraspinatus, teres minor, subscapularis
Deltoid
Pectoralis major
Latissimus dorsi
Teres major
Long head of triceps brachii
Biceps brachii (short/long heads)
Coracobrachialis
Neurological Anatomy
„
Brachial plexus from
cervical spine
„
„
Nerve roots
Associated peripheral
nerves
Vascular Anatomy
„
Subclavian artery
becomes axillary
artery becomes
brachial artery
Evaluation
History
„
Mechanism of injury (etiology)
„
„
„
„
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Direct trauma – contusion, fracture, dislocation
Abduction/external rotation – anterior GH dislocation
Fall on outstretched arm – dislocations, fracture
Fall on tip of shoulder – AC sprain, clavicle fracture,
SC sprain
Repetitive overhead movements – tendonitis,
impingement syndromes, bursitis
History
„
Location of pain
„
„
Localized to shoulder – general shoulder pathology
Radiating pain – neurological involvement
„
Unusual sounds/sensations
„
History of previous injury
„
„
Residual weakness from neck/shoulder injury
Biomechanical changes from prior injury can result in
increased risk of overuse injuries
History
„
Change in activity
„
„
Acute/gradual onset of symptoms
„
„
Macrotraumatic vs. microtruamatic
Characterize pain
„
„
„
„
„
Intensity, duration, frequency, surface change, footwear change
Location (point with 1 finger)
Dull, sharp, burning, throbbing, etc.
Rate on scale (1-10)
What increases or decreases?
Treatment, medication, evaluation to date
Inspection/Observation
„
General posture
„
„
Anterior
„
„
Level of shoulders, clavicle contour, deltoid contour, biceps brachii
contour
Lateral
„
„
Head position, arm splinted to side, “dead arm”, deformity with
dislocations
Deltoid, acromion process, humerus position
Posterior
„
Vertebral alignment (scoliosis), level of scapulae, muscle tone
Palpation – Anterior Structures
„
„
„
„
„
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SC joint
Clavicle
Acromion
AC joint
Coracoid process
Humeral head
Greater tuberosity
„
„
„
„
„
„
„
Lesser tuberosity
Bicipital groove
Humeral shaft
Pectoralis major
Coracobrachialis
Deltoid
Biceps brachii
Palpation – Posterior Structures
„
„
„
„
Spine of scapula
Superior angle
Inferior angle
Rotator cuff
„
„
„
„
Subscapularis
Supraspinatus
Infraspinatus
Teres minor
„
„
„
„
„
„
„
Teres major
Rhomboids
Levator scapulae
Trapezius
Latissimus dorsi
Posterior deltoid
Triceps brachii
Special Tests
„
ROM
„
„
„
Active – patient/athlete moves joint
Passive – clinician moves joint, evaluates end feel
Resistive – proximal stabilization and distal application
of resistance (“break” test vs. resistance through
ROM)
„
Neurovascular
„
Special tests
Range of Motion
„
Flexion (~180 degrees)
„
„
Extension (~60 degrees)
„
„
Posterior deltoid, latissimus dorsi, teres major, triceps brachii (long
head)
Abduction (~180 degrees)
„
„
Biceps brachii, coracobrachialis, anterior and middle deltoid, pectoralis
major (clavicular head)
Deltoid, supraspinatus, biceps brachii
Adduction (~45 degrees)
„
Pectoralis major, latissimus dorsi, teres major, coracobrachialis, triceps
brachii
Range of Motion
„
Internal rotation (~70-80 degrees at 90/90)
„
„
External rotation (~80-90 degrees at 90/90)
„
„
Infraspinatus, teres minor, supraspinatus, posterior deltoid
Horizontal abduction (~45 degrees at 90)
„
„
Subscapularis, pectoralis major, latissimus dorsi, teres major,
anterior deltoid
Posterior deltoid, infraspinatus, teres minor
Horizontal adduction (~120 degrees at 90)
„
Pectoralis major, anterior deltoid
Range of Motion
„
Scapular protraction
„
„
Scapular retraction
„
„
Lower trapezius, pectoralis minor, subclavius
Scapular downward rotation
„
„
Upper trapezius, levator scapulae, rhomboids
Scapular depression
„
„
Trapezius, rhomboids, levator scapulae
Scapular elevation
„
„
Serratus anterior, pectoralis minor
Rhomboids, pectoralis minor
Scapular upward rotation
„
Trapezius, serratus anterior
Neurovascular
„
Neurological evalation
„
„
Nerve root level and peripheral nerve sensory and
motor distributions
Vascular evaluation
„
„
„
„
„
Skin temperature/color
Capillary refill
Radial pulse
Brachial pulse
Axillary pulse
Special Tests
„
Anterior/posterior translation – SC joint
„
“Piano key” test – AC joint
„
Apprehension test – GH joint (anterior)
„
Relocation test – GH joint (anterior)
„
Anterior/posterior glide tests – GH joint
„
Sulcus test – GH joint (inferior)
Special Tests
„
Neer test – rotator cuff impingement
„
Hawkins-Kennedy test – rotator cuff impingement
„
Yergason’s test – biceps tendon instability
„
Speed’s test – biceps tendon irritation
„
Empty can test – supraspinatus impingement
„
Drop arm test – rotator cuff tear
Injuries
Injuries
„
SC joint injuries
„
AC joint injuries
„
GH joint injuries
„
Rotator cuff injuries
„
Biceps tendon injuries
„
Fractures
SC Joint Injuries
„
„
Most common direction of displacement is
anterior
Significant potential concerns if posterior
AC Joint Injuries
„
„
„
Horizontal stability from superior/inferior AC
ligaments
Vertical stability from coracoclavicular ligaments
If “step-off” is present, indicates complete tear
of AC ligaments and at least partial tear of
coracoclavicular ligaments
AC Joint Injuries
GH Joint Injuries
„
„
„
Anterior much more
common than posterior
If occurs before age 30,
>90% chance of
recurrence – surgery
If after age 30 – choose
between surgery/rehab
Rotator Cuff Injuries
„
Impingement syndromes
„
„
Tendonitis
„
„
“Pinching” of tendons under acromion process
Poor blood supply, “wrung out” with rotation
Rotator cuff tears
„
Usually from cumulative effects
Biceps Tendon Injuries
„
Tendonitis
„
„
Secondary to biomechanical issues and/or repetitive
overuse movements
Biceps tendon rupture
„
„
Can occur to long head from glenoid rim, short head
from coracoid process or distal tendon from radius at
elbow
Typically has resultant deformity
Fractures
„
Scapula
„
„
„
Clavicle
„
„
Rarely suffers bony injury
If so, processes most common
site
Commonly fractured in middle
1/3
Humerus
„
„
Head often injured with GH
dislocations
Shaft rarely injured unless
severe forces