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Arthroscopic remplissage for the treatment of anterior glenohumeral instability with engaging Hill–Sachs lesions

Article

Last updated: 08 Feb 2025

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Abstract

Background
Posterolateral compression fracture of the humeral head (a Hill–Sachs lesion) is a common finding associated with anterior shoulder instability. Burkhart and De Beer were the first to describe engaging Hill–Sachs lesion. They concluded that arthroscopic Bankart repair in the presence of such bone deficiencies is likely to fail and requires open surgery. Purchase and colleagues presented a procedure that consists of an arthroscopic posterior capsulodesis and infraspinatus tenodesis to fill (remplissage) the Hill–Sachs lesion in addition to an arthroscopic Bankart repair.
Objectives
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the outcome of arthroscopic remplissage in cases of recurrent shoulder dislocation with engaging Hill–Sachs lesion using one anchor for the remplissage.
Patients and methods
A total of 15 patients (12 male and three female) with recurrent anterior shoulder instability and engaging Hill–Sachs lesion underwent arthroscopic remplissage procedure with capsulolabral repair. The mean age of the patients was 28 years and the mean follow-up period was 12 months. Two patients had concomitant superior lateral anterior posterior tear (SLAP) lesion type 1.
Results
On the basis of the preoperative MRI, 13 patients had a large Hill–Sachs defect. The dominant arm was involved in eight (53%). The mean surgery duration was ~100 min. Overall, a mean of four anchors were used, including those for Bankart repair, with one anchor used for the remplissage procedure. Rowe score for instability increased from a mean of 12.3 preoperatively to 86.3 at 6 months postoperatively. None of the patients included in this study complained of decreased shoulder range of motion. One patient complained of painful abduction of the affected shoulder.
Conclusion
The remplissage technique achieves good results in patients with anterior shoulder dislocation associated with engaging humeral head defects with concomitant Bankart lesion at short-term follow-up. The Bankart repair can be completed first followed by remplissage.

DOI

10.4103/1110-1148.177922

Keywords

Hill–Sachs lesion, remplissage, Shoulder dislocation

Authors

First Name

Amr

Last Name

Abdelrahman

MiddleName

Ahmed

Affiliation

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Orcid

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Volume

50

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

53595

Issue Date

2015-07-01

Publish Date

2015-07-01

Page Start

166

Page End

170

Print ISSN

1110-1148

Online ISSN

2090-9926

Link

https://eoj.journals.ekb.eg/article_409988.html

Detail API

http://journals.ekb.eg?_action=service&article_code=409988

Order

409,988

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

The Egyptian Orthopaedic Journal

Publication Link

https://eoj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Arthroscopic remplissage for the treatment of anterior glenohumeral instability with engaging Hill–Sachs lesions

Details

Type

Article

Created At

08 Feb 2025