Suprascapular nerve entrapment at the spinoglenoid notch causes infraspinatus weakness and wasting. Patients present with shoulder pain and weakness. The spinoglenoid notch cyst is the reason for suprascapular nerve compression. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) confirms the diagnosis of spinoglenoid cyst and its nerve compression. Also, MRI rules out other differential diagnosis causing shoulder pain and weakness. One of the treatment modalities for small and asymptomatic cyst is conservative, which has produced acceptable results and functional outcome. Open or arthroscopic aspiration or decompression is indicated for patients with single small cysts where conservative treatment failed, and cyst associated with suprascapular nerve compression. We report a 32-year-old dancer with a large multiloculated multiple spinoglenoid cysts compressing the suprascapular nerve causing infraspinatus wasting and shoulder dysfunction. We performed an open surgical decompression of the suprascapular nerve and excised multiple ganglions. The patient improved significantly and regained his shoulder function and muscle wasting at two-year follow-up.
The neck is essential and vital for all head movements and performing daily functional activities. The second-degree deep dermal and full-thickness burns causing anterior neck contracture restricts movement and if untreated develop deformities, in the oral cavity, eyes, posture, and chin growth and development, especially in children. Neck contracture results in kyphoscoliosis, lower lip seal resulting in impaired vision, balance, swallowing, feeding, and speech as well as social stigma, depression, and embarrassment. The treatment for post-burn anterior neck contractures is contracture release and reconstruction with skin grafts (split and full-thickness), axial pattern flaps, perforator propeller flaps, microvascular free flaps, tissue expansion, prefabrications, and skin substitutes. In addition to functional and esthetic recovery, post-surgery social and vocational rehabilitation is essential for children. We report a ten-year-old boy with severe anterior neck post-burn contracture managed with unilateral supraclavicular flap and residual areas with a split-thickness skin graft.
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