Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Supraspinatus: articular undersurface tear at the site of the tendon attachment to the greater tuberosity, also called rim-rent tear or partial articular surface tendon avulsion (PASTA lesion). Postero-superior part of the supraspinatus in combination with the antero-inferior part of the infraspinatus tendon.
MRI of the shoulder has been found to be highly sensitive and specific for detection of full-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears at 1.5-T or lower field strength compared with arthroscopy. MRI of the shoulder at 3.0 T has not been specifically assessed.
MRI provides vital information about the location, size, and depth of rotator cuff tears and the quality of the surrounding tendon, allowing more comprehensive surgical planning and improved outcomes.
Supraspinatus tendon tears are rotator cuff injuries affecting the supraspinatus tendon and are a common cause of shoulder pain. Epidemiology They are the most common rotator cuff injuries and around 1/3 of them are isolated only affecting the ...
Supraspinatus myotendinous junction injuries are uncommon at MRI. These lesions invariably involve the anterior bundle of the supraspinatus muscle and may oc - cur with a concomitant insertional tendon tear. High-grade chronic injuries lead to selective atrophy and fatty infiltration of the anterior supraspinatus muscle. Oñate Miranda and Bureau
The schematic diagrams demonstrate six types of delamination tears of the supraspinatus tendon. Representative MR images demonstrate tear at the footprint with extension into tendon substance in axial plane splitting articular and bursal fibers of the supraspinatus tendon (delamination tear).
Full-thickness tear of the supraspinatus tendon. a Illustration of a full thickness tendon tear. b Oblique coronal fat-suppressed PD-weighted MRI showing a SS tendon tear that communicates the articular side (white arrow) and bursal side (black arrow).
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the shoulder joint is the preferred diagnostic method for evaluating rotator cuff tears [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]. These tears can occur in the bursal surface, the articular surface, or the tendon intrasubstance [7, 8].
MRI of the shoulder has been found to be highly sensitive and specific for detection of full-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears at 1.5-T or lower field strength compared with arthroscopy. MRI of the shoulder at 3.0 T has not been specifically assessed.
£“ƒ QÙûáŒHÑú!@#eáüý#tøœ÷_šúßçL¢c¼¹ YFc'@R$ý´Ù–®eûŠòrßæ:è>ZjtÃÝ JôR5éÔT>éüe ’_ù}Q6 æ«y÷å„`Û ¬IŠ À ¤H Ùñ&Î× íÍd= > l T ÈŽ*k¦·Sχþÿþ´* † v9 N #Œ6 Š/¼à ÉR [ 0 ! ì ìvÝwßû___r·í& ô®›NÑ€Ê ` ¬ Æl #r aMŸ 'Z†üËC .p¶éD›‡›… î2¶ïÿ»ø}© c ”ú š]Çúß &Aœ ± à ÿ9ÛÈ×4¤8 !`ßídÝù ...