Title: The Shoulder Complex
1The Shoulder Complex
2The Shoulder Complex
- General Structure Function
- Structure Function of Specific Joints
- Muscular Considerations
- Specific Functional Considerations
- Common Injuries
3The Shoulder Complex
- General Structure Function
- Structure Function of Specific Joints
- Muscular Considerations
- Specific Functional Considerations
- Common Injuries
4General Structure
5General Function
- Provides very mobile, yet strong base for hand to
perform its intricate gross and skilled functions - Transmits loads from upper extremity to axial
skeleton
6Shoulder Girdle
7Shoulder Complex Movements
- Shoulder Girdle
- Elevation depression
- Protraction retraction
- Upward downward rotation
- Upward tilt
- Shoulder (glenohumeral)
- FL, EXT, HyperEXT
- ABD, ADD, HyperADD, HyperABD
- MR, LR, HorizontalABD, HorizontalADD
8Abduction/Lateral Tilt (Protraction)
Linear Movement Frontal Plane Angular
movement Transverse Plane
Adduction/Reduced Lateral Tilt (Retraction)
9Depression
Elevation
Linear Movement Frontal Plane
10Downward rotation
Upward rotation
11Shoulder Complex Movements
Upward tilt Reduction of Upward Tilt Angular
movement Sagittal plane
12Limited by capsular torsion
Limited by bony impingement of greater tubercle
on acromion
13(No Transcript)
14Large ROM Due To
- Poor bony structure
- Poor ligamentous restraint
- Scapulohumeral cooperative action
15The Shoulder Complex
- General Structure Function
- Structure Function of Specific Joints
- Muscular Considerations
- Specific Functional Considerations
- Common Injuries
16Structure Function of Specific Joints
- Sternoclavicular Joint
- Acromioclavicular Joint
- Scapulothoracic Joint
- Glenolhumeral Joint
- Coracoacromial Arch
17Sternoclavicular Joint Bony Structure
Poor Diarthrodial Biaxial
18Sternoclavicular Joint Capsule
Very strong
19Sternoclavicular Joint Interclavicular Ligament
Resists superior anterior (posterior portion)
motion
20Sternoclavicular Joint Sternoclavicular Ligament
Resists anterior (PSL), posterior (ASL),
superior motion
21Sternoclavicular Joint Costoclavicular Ligament
Resists upward and posterior motion
22Sternoclavicular Joint Accessory Structures
Resists medial inferior displacement via
articular contact
23Sternoclavicular Joint Articular Surfaces
- Medial end of clavice
- is convex
- Clavicular facet is
- reciprocally shaped
24Sternoclavicular Joint Motions
Axial Rotation 50 EL/DEP 35 PROT/RET 35
25Sternoclavicular Joint Motions
- Frontal plane
- Elev/Dep
- Sagittal plane
- Post Rot
- Horizontal plane
- ProT/ReT
- Ant/Post axis
- Vertical axis
26Acromioclavicular JointBony Structure
Poor Diarthrodial Nonaxial
27Acromioclavicular JointJoint Capsule
Very weak
28Acromioclavicular JointAcromioclavicular Ligament
Resists axial rotation posterior motion
29Acromioclavicular JointCoracoclavicular Ligament
Resists superior motion
30Acromioclavicular JointAccessory Structures
Articular disc
31Acromioclavicular Joint Motion
Little relative motion at AC joint
UR/DR 60 EL/DEP 30 PROT/RET 30-50
32Acromioclavicular Joint Osteokinematics
- Horizontal plane
- adjustments
- during scapulothoracic
- protraction
- Sagittal plane adjustment
- during scapulothoracic
- elevation
33Clavicle
- Acts a strut connecting upper extremity to thorax
- Protects brachial plexus vascular structures
- Serves as attachment site for many shoulder
muscles
34Scapula
35Scapular Plane
36Scapulothoracic Joint
- No osseous connection
- SUBSCAP SA
37Glenohumeral Joint Humerus
Retroversion angle 30
38Glenohumeral Joint Humerus
Inclination angle 45
39Glenohumeral Joint Glenoid Fossa
- Inclination angle 5
- Retroversion angle 7
40Glenohumeral Joint Glenoid Fossa
- Articular cartilage thicker on periphery
- Shallow fossa 1/3 diameter of humeral head
41Glenohumeral Joint Bony Structure
- Pure rotation
- Bony restraint poor
- Head 4-5X larger than fossa
- Close-packed position
- ABD with LR
42Glenohumeral Joint Joint Capsule
- Inherently lax
- Surface area 2X head
- Provides restraint for ABD, ADD, LR, MR
43Glenohumeral JointSuperior GH Ligament
- Resists inferior translation in rest or adducted
arm - Well-developed in 50
44Glenohumeral Joint Coracohumeral Ligament
- Resists inferior translation in shoulders with
less-developed SGH
45Glenohumeral JointMiddle GH Ligament
- Great variability in proximal attachment
morphology - Absent in 30
- Resists inferior translation in ABD ER
- Restrains anterior translation (45 ABD)
46Glenohumeral JointInferior GH Ligament
- 3 components (A,P,Ax)
- Resists inferior, anterior, posterior
translation
47Glenohumeral Joint Bursae
- Subcoracoid
- Subacromial
- Subscapular
48Glenohumeral Joint Accessory Structures
Labrum
- 50 of depth
- Increases tangential stability 20
49Glenohumeral Joint Intra-articular Pressure
- Synovial fluid causes adhesion
- Provides 50 restraint
50Coracoacromial Arch
51Glenohumeral Joint ROM
- Flexion (167 W 171 M)
- 30 in max LR
- Extension (60)
- Abduction (180)
- 60 in max IR
- Hyperadduction (75)
52Glenohumeral Joint ROM
- Total rotation 180
- Total ROT 90 in 90 ABD
- Medial rotation (90)
- Lateral rotation (90)
- Horizontal abduction (45)
- Horizontal adduction (135)
Role of multiarticular muscles???
53Glenohumeral Joint ROM
- Medial rotation (90)
- Lateral rotation (90)
- Horizontal abduction (45)
- Horizontal adduction (135)
54Soft Tissue Restraint Summary
- Anterior
- Capsule
- Labrum
- Glenohumeral lig
- Coracohumeral lig
- Subscapularis
- Pectoralis major
- Inferior
- Capsule
- Triceps brachii (L)
- Posterior
- Capsule
- Labrum
- Teres minor
- Infraspinatus
- Superior
- Labrum
- Coracohumeral lig
- Suprapinatus
- Biceps brachii (L)
- Coracoacromial arch
- Subacromial bursa
55The Shoulder Complex
- General Structure Function
- Structure Function of Specific Joints
- Muscular Considerations
- Specific Functional Considerations
- Common Injuries
56Shoulder girdle has its own set of muscles.
57Retraction of the Scapulothoracic Joint
Levator scapula
58Protraction of the Scapulothoracic Joint
Pectoralis minor
59Pathomechanics of a weak serratus anterior muscle
- Deltoid force causes scapula to downwardly
rotate.
Unstable and cannot resist deltoid force
60(No Transcript)
61(No Transcript)
62GH Flexion
- Prime flexors
- Anterior deltoid
- Pectoralis major clavicular portion
- Assistant flexors
- Coracobrachialis
- Biceps brachii short head
63GH Flexion
- Anterior deltoid
- Coracobrachialis
- Biceps brachii
64GH Extension
- Gravitational force
- Posterior deltoid
- Latissimus dorsi
- Pectoralis major (sternal)
- Teres major (with resistance)
65Abduction at Glenohumeral Joint
- Major abductors of humerus
- Supraspinatus
- Initiates abduction
- Active for first 110 degrees of abduction
- Middle deltoid
- Active 90-180 degrees of abduction
- Superior dislocating component neutralized by
infraspinatus, subscapularis, and teres minor
66Abduction at Glenohumeral Joint
Initiates abduction Active for first 110 degrees
of abduction
Active 90-180 degrees of abduction Superior
dislocating componentneutralized by
infraspinatus, subscapularis, and teres minor
67Abduction at Glenohumeral Joint The Kinetic Arc
68Adduction of Glenohumeral Joint
- Primary adductors
- Latissimus dorsi
- Teres major
- Sternocostal pectoralis
- Minor assistance
- Biceps brachii short head
- Triceps brachii long head
- Above 90 degrees- coracobrachialis and
subscapularis
69GH Medial Rotation
- Subscapularis
- Latissimus dorsi
- Pectoralis major
- Teres major (with resistance)
Decreased activity with ABD
70GH Lateral Rotation
- Primary
- Infraspinatus
- Assistant
- Teres minor
- Posterior deltoid
71Horizontal Adduction and Abduction
- Anterior to joint
- Pectoralis major (both heads), anterior deltoid,
coracobrachialis - Assisted by short head of biceps brachi
- Posterior to joint
- Middle and posterior deltoid, infraspinatus,
teres minor - Assisted by teres major, latissimus dorsi
72Muscle Strength
- Adduction (2X ABD)
- Extension
- Flexion
- Abduction
- Internal rotation (max in neutral)
- External rotation (max at 90 FL)
Role of multiarticular muscles???
73The Shoulder Complex
- General Structure Function
- Structure Function of Specific Joints
- Muscular Considerations
- Specific Functional Considerations
- Common Injuries
74Specific Functional Considerations
- Stability Functions of Shoulder Girdle
- Mobility Functions of Shoulder Girdle
- Rotator Cuff Function
75Stability Functions of Shoulder Girdle
- Provides stable base from which shoulder muscles
can generate force - Shoulder girdle muscles as stabilizers
- Maintain appropriate force-length relationship
- Maintain maximum congruence of shoulder joint
76Specific Functional Considerations
- Stability Functions of Shoulder Girdle
- Mobility Functions of Shoulder Girdle
- Rotator Cuff Function
77Mobility Functions of Shoulder Girdle
- Permits largest ROM of any complex in the body
- Shoulder girdle increases ROM with less
compromise of stability (scapulohumeral rhythm)
(4 joints vs. 1 joint) - Facilitate movements of the upper extremity by
positioning GH favorably
78Dynamic Stabilization Mechanisms
- Passive muscle tension
- Compressive forces from muscle contraction
- Joint motion that results in tightening of
passive structures - Redirection of joint force toward center of GH
joint
79Muscular Considerations
- Force-length relationships quite variable due to
multiple joints - Tension development in agonist frequently
requires tension development in antagonist to
prevent dislocation of the humeral head - Force couple 2 forces equal in magnitude but
opposite in direction
80Movements in the Frontal PlaneGH Joint -
Abduction
ABD - 60 UR - 20
- Shoulder Girdle UR
- Totals
- Upward rotation - 60
- GH Abduction - 120
- 21 (.66) ratio
- 1.251 after 30
- 0.5-0.75 across individuals
ABD - 30 UR - 40
ABD 30
81Movements in the Frontal PlaneGH Joint -
Adduction
Fig 5.17
82Movements in the Sagittal PlaneGH Joint
Flexion Extension
- Shoulder Girdle
- UR
- ELEV (gt90)
- PROT ( to 90)
- RET (gt90)
Fig 5.18
83Movements in the Sagittal PlaneGH Joint -
Hyperextension
- Shoulder Girdle Upward tilt of scapula
Fig 5.20
84Movements in the Transverse PlaneGH Joint MR
LR
Fig 5.22a
85Spinal Contribution to GH Motion
86Movements in the Transverse PlaneGH HAdd HAbd
87Influences on GH ROM
- Humeral position in other planes
- FL limited by ER (30? FL in max ER)
- ABD limited by IR (60?-90? ABD in max IR)
- ABD with ER 90-120?
- Rotation limited by ABD (total ROT only 90? in
90? ABD) - Scapular position
- Elbow position
88Large ROM Due To
- Poor bony structure
- Poor ligamentous restraint
- Scapulohumeral coordination
- Normal movement dependent on interrelationships
of 4 joints - Restriction in any of these four can impair
normal function
89Specific Functional Considerations
- Stability Functions of Shoulder Girdle
- Mobility Functions of Shoulder Girdle
- Rotator Cuff Function
90Teres minor
Supraspinatus
Subscapularis
Infraspinatus
91(No Transcript)
92Function of Rotator Cuff
- Large external muscles (e.g., lats, delts) create
shear forces - Rotator cuff provides
- Joint compression
- Tangential restraint (Ant, Post, Sup)
93Destabilizing Action of Deltoid
94Deltoid produces superior shear force at GH joint.
95Subscapularis
- Resists superior shear
- Produces simultaneous internal rotation
96Infraspinatus Teres Minor
- Resists superior shear
- Neutralizes SUBSCAP internal rotation
97Supraspinatus
98Summary of Active Arthrokinematics Resisting Shear
99Destabilizing Action of Latissimus Dorsi
- LD pulls humerus INF
- SSP resists INF force
- INF SUBSCAP create compressive force
100The Shoulder Complex
- General Structure Function
- Structure Function of Specific Joints
- Muscular Considerations
- Specific Functional Considerations
- Common Injuries
101Common Shoulder Injuries
- Joint dislocations
- Clavicular fracture
- Rotator cuff injuries
- Other rotational injuries
- Subscapular neuropathy
102Evaluation of Injuries
- Mechanism of Injury (MOI)
- How did the injury occur?
- Pathology (PATH)
- What tissues are damaged?
- Sign Symptoms (SS)
- What does the patient tell you?
- What can be determined from an evaluation of the
injury?
103Joint Dislocations Acromioclavicular Sprain
- AKA Shoulder Separation
- MOI Downward blow to outer end of shoulder
- Fall on outstretched hand, Punching
- PATH Sprain of AC ligaments
- SS Pain over AC joint
- Laxity of AC joint???
104Joint DislocationsShoulder Dislocation
- MOI Arm forcefully ABD LR
- May occur by a blow to top of shoulder
- PATH Head of humerus is forced out of the
glenoid fossa - SS Arm held out from side in slight ABD LR
- Loss of normal rounded contour of deltoid muscle
105Chronic Dislocation of the Shoulder
- MOI Congenital abnormality
- Repeated acute dislocations
- PATH Head of humerus relatively easily come out
of the glenoid fossa - Tissue damage due to repeated dislocations
- SS Usually not very painful
106Clavicular Fracture
- MOI Downward blow to outer end of shoulder
- Fall on outstretched hand
- PATH Fracture to middle 1/3
- SS Patient supports injured arm
- Head may be tilted toward injured side with face
turned to opposite side
107Rotator Cuff Injuries
- MOI Overuse
- Falling on an outstretched hand
- PATH Strains or tearing of rotator cuff muscles
- Supraspinatus most often injured
- SS Pain, Inflammation, Weakness
108Impingement
- Possible mechanisms
- Weak or inflexible rotator cuff
- Small anatomical space
- Hyperabduction of GH joint
- GH ABD ROT
109Impingement Roll-Slide Kinematics
Roll created by abduction not countered with
Slide action
110Rotator Cuff Injury
- Anatomical cause of rotator cuff injury
- Kinesiological cause of injury
111Impingement
- Narrow space
- Inextensibility of capsule, ligaments, muscles
esp. rotator cuff - Abduction and internal/external rotations
112- During ABD
- SSP tendon pushed into acromion process CA
ligament - During ROT
- SSP tendon dragged along the inferior surface of
the acromion process
113Rotator Cuff Injury
- Anatomical cause of rotator cuff injury
- Kinesiological cause of injury
114Kinesiological breakdown of overhand throwing
Wind-Up Phase
No excessive movements
(safe)
First Motion
Maximum knee lift of leg
115Kinesiological breakdown of overhand throwing
- Shoulder ABD (DELT SSP)
- RC maintain proper humeral head position
Stride
Abduction and no rotation
(Safe)
Lead leg begins to move Arms separate
Lead foot contacts the ground
116Kinesiological breakdown of overhand throwing
- ER in ABD position ER 150-180
- ECC action of SUBSCAP (decelerates ER humerus)
- RC stabilization
Arm Cocking
External rotation in abducted position
Possible cuff damage
Lead foot contact
Maximum shoulder external rotation
117Kinesiological breakdown of overhand throwing
Arm Acceleration
- Concentric IR (PMJR LD )
- IR velocity (gt 1000 /s)
- RC stabilization
Internal rotation in abducted position
Possible cuff damage
Maximum shoulder ER
Ball release
118Kinesiological breakdown of overhand throwing
Arm Deceleration
- Decelerating IR ADD
- ECC action of TMin
- RC stabilization
Internal rotation Abduction reduced
Safer
Ball release
Maximum shoulder IR
119Kinesiological breakdown of overhand throwing
Follow Through
- Decelerating IR
- ECC action of TMin
- RC stabilization
Reduced internal rotation
Safe
Maximum shoulder IR
Ends in balanced position
120Rotator Cuff Injuries Solution
- Alter technique during problem phases to avoid
impingement - Arm cocking
- Arm acceleration
- Strengthen rotator cuff
- Surgical repair
Video techniques
121Risk Factors
- Risk factor a characteristic that influences
the loading on the musculoskeletal system - Movement risk factors characteristics of a
movement - Intrinsic risk factors the personal, physical,
and psychological characteristics of an
individual - Extrinsic risk factors the environmental and
administrative procedures
122Intrinsic Risk Factors
- Age and gender
- Physical fitness
- Overtraining
- Skeletal abnormalities
- Technique
- Warm-up
- Psychological factors
123Technique
- Technique refers to the movement pattern of an
individual during a particular movement or
sequence of movements. Good technique is a
movement pattern not only effective in
performance, but also one that minimizes risk of
injury by appropriately distributing the overall
load throughout the kinetic chain. Poor technique
is characterized by inappropriate utilization and
summation of muscular effort and abnormal joint
movements, both of which result in localized
overload and, therefore, increased risk of injury.
124Swimming
- Solutions
- Lead with hand to ? IR
- Increase body roll to ? ABD
Mechanism ABD IR
125Supraspinatus Tear
126Other Rotational Injuries
- Tears of labrum
- Mostly in anterior-superior region
- Tears of biceps brachii tendon
- Due to forceful rotational movements
- Also calcification of soft tissues, degenerative
changes in articular surfaces, bursitis
127Biceps Tendon Tear
128Subscapular Neuropathy
- Denervation of INF with ? strength GH ER
- Mechanism Repeated stretching of nerve
129Loads on the Shoulder
- Arm segment moment arm
- Perpendicular distance between weight vector and
shoulder. - With elbow flexion, upper arm and forearm/hand
segments must be analyzed separately. - Large torques from extended moment arms countered
by shoulder muscles. - Load reduced by half with maximal elbow flexion
130Injury Potential in the Shoulder Complex -
Impacts
- Sternoclavicular Joint
- not commonly injured
- may sprain anteriorly if fall on top of shoulder
or middle delt - pain in horizontal abd - children may dislocate anteriorly during throwing
because of increased joint mobility as compared
to adults - posterior dislocation may occur when force is
applied to sternal end of clavicle serious
because of trachea, esophagus, and blood vessels
located posteriorly
- Clavicular Injuries
- fx to any part due to direct trauma
- fx to middle 1/3 can occur by falling on
shoulder, outstretched arm, or direct trauma to
shoulder that transmits force down shaft of
clavicle - AC Injuries
- dislocation from fall on shoulder, fall on elbow
or outstretched arm - overuse injuries from overhand pattern (throwing,
tennis, swimming) or sports that repeatedly load
in the overhead position (wrestling, wt lifting)
131Glenohumeral Injuries
- Most common dislocation in anterior
(anterior-inferior 95) - most commonly dislocated when abducted and ER
overhead - recurrence rate 33-50 (66-90 lt20 yrs)