A Novel Proportional Method for the Simplified Assessment of Glenoid Bone Loss in Patients With Anterior Shoulder Instability

Menglong Li, Mingrui Fan, Yuchen Zhang, Pu Shao, Tong Liu, Jianlin Zuo
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Abstract

Background:Surgical planning for anterior shoulder instability (ASI) necessitates accurate measurements of glenoid bone defects, but current methods are either challenging or too complex for practical use. This underscores the need for a simplified, but precise, assessment technique for anterior glenoid bone defects.Purpose:To introduce a new measurement technique that requires only computed tomography (CT) of the affected shoulder joint and simultaneously simplifies the assessment of bone defects in the anterior glenoid.Study Design:Cohort study (diagnosis); Level of evidence, 3.Methods:CT scans of the glenoid from 285 healthy participants and 43 patients with unilateral ASI were collected and reconstructed in 3 dimensions. Initially, we established the proportional relationship between the maximum height and width in the superior-inferior and anterior-posterior directions of the glenoid as well as the location of their intersection (point O) in healthy participants. Subsequently, glenoid bone defects in patients with ASI were measured using the contralateral comparison method, the best-fit circle method, the CT-specific formula method, and our novel proportional method. We analyzed the differences in defect ratios and sizes as well as glenoid track calculations among the 4 methods.Results:The mean width-to-height ratio of the glenoid was determined to be 0.69 ± 0.04, allowing for the simplification of the calculation to width = 0.7 × height for clinical convenience. Point O was consistently located at the lower one-third of the glenoid height. There was no statistical significance noted in the measurements of bone defect size and bone defect ratio when comparing the novel proportional method, the contralateral comparison method, and the best-fit circle method; however, a significant increase in bone defect size and bone defect ratio was estimated with the CT-specific formula method (defect size: F = 19.20, P < .0001; defect ratio: F = 15.99, P < .0001).Conclusion:We introduced a novel method for estimating the width of glenoid bone defects through the proportion of glenoid width to height, finding that 70% of the glenoid height at its lower one-third closely approximated its maximum width. This approach, requiring only CT data from the affected shoulder, simplified calculations and matched the accuracy of traditional methods. It offers potential clinical benefits in evaluating glenoid defects.
一种新的简化评估肩前路不稳患者肩关节骨丢失的比例方法
背景:前肩不稳(ASI)的手术计划需要精确测量肩关节骨缺损,但目前的方法要么具有挑战性,要么过于复杂,无法实际应用。这强调需要一种简化但精确的评估前盂骨缺损的技术。目的:介绍一种新的测量技术,该技术只需要对受累肩关节进行计算机断层扫描(CT),同时简化了对前盂骨缺损的评估。研究设计:队列研究(诊断);证据水平,3。方法:收集285例健康人及43例单侧ASI患者肩胛盂的CT图像,进行三维重建。首先,我们在健康参与者中建立了关节盂上下方向和前后方向的最大高度和宽度以及它们的交点(O点)之间的比例关系。随后,我们采用对侧比例法、最佳拟合圆法、ct特异性公式法和我们新颖的比例法测量ASI患者的盂骨缺损。我们分析了4种方法在缺陷比例和大小以及关节盂径迹计算方面的差异。结果:关节盂的平均宽高比为0.69±0.04,可简化计算为宽= 0.7 ×高,方便临床。O点始终位于关节盂高度的下三分之一处。新型比例法、对侧比较法和最佳拟合圆法在骨缺损大小和骨缺损率测量上比较,差异均无统计学意义;然而,使用ct特异性公式法估计骨缺损大小和骨缺损比例明显增加(缺损大小:F = 19.20, P <;。;缺陷率:F = 15.99, P <;。)。结论:我们介绍了一种通过关节盂宽度与高度之比估算关节盂骨缺损宽度的新方法,发现关节盂下三分之一处70%的关节盂高度接近其最大宽度。该方法只需要受影响肩部的CT数据,简化了计算,并且精度与传统方法相当。它为评估关节盂缺损提供了潜在的临床益处。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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