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Rotator Cuff Tears and Associated Nerve Injuries
Orthopedics, 2000ABSTRACT A series of 15 patients with concomitant rotator cuff tears and infraclavicular brachial plexus injuries treated between 1 980 and 1 989 were reviewed. There were 6 men and 9 women with a mean age of 65 years. Seventeen nerve injuries were identified, including 12 axillary nerves, 4 suprascapular nerves, and 1 musculocutaneous nerve.
T D, Brown +4 more
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Diagnosis of tears in rotator-cuff-injuries
European Journal of Radiology, 1997Pathology of the rotator cuff is the cause of most common problems at the shoulder joint. Acute injuries are not as frequent as chronic cuff disease, but often they aggravate inflammatory or degenerative tendon alterations, even if they are of minor severity.
C, Gückel, A, Nidecker
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Rotator Cuff and Biceps Injuries in Baseball
Clinics in Sports MedicineRotator cuff and biceps tendon injuries are a common source of pain and dysfunction among overhead athletes. The stress across the glenohumeral joint and its dynamic stabilizers in high level throwing leads to adaptive anatomic changes that must be recognized and respected. Nonoperative treatment is recommended for partial rotator cuff tears and biceps
Christopher S, Ahmad +2 more
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Orthopaedic review, 1988
The rotator cuff lends stability to the glenohumeral joint and provides active motion. The cuff is susceptible to attritional disease, and as a result, injuries tend to fall into an age-related spectrum. Symptoms and treatment vary with the severity of the injury.
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The rotator cuff lends stability to the glenohumeral joint and provides active motion. The cuff is susceptible to attritional disease, and as a result, injuries tend to fall into an age-related spectrum. Symptoms and treatment vary with the severity of the injury.
openaire +1 more source
Rotator cuff injuries in overhead athletes
Operative Techniques in Orthopaedics, 2001Sporting activities, such as throwing, swimming, tennis, and the javelin, require the shoulder to rotate at high speeds with the arm abducted, which places the rotator cuff at risk for microtraumatic injury. The rotator cuff works with the labrum and glenohumeral ligaments to restrain abnormal motion of the humeral head on the glenoid.
David W. Altchek, Joshua D. Hatch
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