2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jse.2012.12.033
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The prevalence of a large Hill-Sachs lesion that needs to be treated

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Cited by 131 publications
(105 citation statements)
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References 13 publications
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“…0%-25% bone loss: The literature suggests that patients with glenohumeral instability with up to 15% isolated glenoid bone loss can be treated with an arthroscopic soft tissue Bankart repair alone [50] . Initial trials favoured open stabilization over arthroscopic Bankart repair [51,52] .…”
Section: Glenoid Bone Lossmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…0%-25% bone loss: The literature suggests that patients with glenohumeral instability with up to 15% isolated glenoid bone loss can be treated with an arthroscopic soft tissue Bankart repair alone [50] . Initial trials favoured open stabilization over arthroscopic Bankart repair [51,52] .…”
Section: Glenoid Bone Lossmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If the Hill-Sachs lesion is "off-track" it gives rise to a more unstable shoulder in the context of bipolar bone loss. An updated definition of an engaging humeral bone lesion can be defined as one that lies outside of the glenoid track [50] . The concepts described can help determine the management of bipolar bone loss in shoulder instability.…”
Section: Bipolar Humeral and Glenoid Bone Lossmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Engagement can also be evaluated during arthroscopy after the surgical stabilization has been completed. Engagement in this situation is considered by some as the true definition of an engaging Hill-Sachs lesion [21,23]. Surgeons may be apprehensive performing this examination at this point as it can lead to increased stress on the new repair and early failure [20,21].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These lesions are exceedingly common and have been observed in 65–67% of first-time shoulder dislocators and 84–93% of recurrent shoulder dislocators 57–59. Among a consecutive series of 100 shoulders with recurrent dislocation, Kurokawa et al 60 reported an even higher incidence of HS lesions (97 out of 100 shoulders, 97%). While reverse HS lesions—compression fractures of the anterosuperomedial humeral head—have been described in the setting of posterior glenohumeral instability, these lesions are much less common.…”
Section: Description and Incidence Of Hs Lesionsmentioning
confidence: 97%