Sports Medicine: Just the Facts

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  • Superior labral tears have been described, as shoulder
    arthroscopy experience has increased. Open surgery
    with the arthrotomy placed deep to the subscapularis
    does not demonstrate this anatomy, and therefore little
    has been mentioned in the literature (Snyder et al,
    1990).

  • There can be anatomic variants and gradual develop-
    mental changes with age and use, overuse leading to
    tissue failure, and traumatic instability events.
    Superior labrum anterior to posterior(SLAP) tears
    may be an isolated etiology for shoulder pain or com-
    bined with rotator cuff pathology.
    •Overhead sports as in baseball pitching may place
    additional stresses on the superior labrum. As sports
    participation and injury recognition increases, so does
    the experience in treatment of injuries to the superior
    labrum (Andrews, Carson, Jr, and McLeod, 1985;
    Abrams, 1991).


SUPERIOR LABRUM ANATOMY



  • The labrum is a cartilaginous ring around the shallow
    glenoid, contributing to depth and humeral head con-
    tact (Howell and Galinat, 1989). Superior labrum
    lesions can occur alone or combined with anterior or
    posterior labral avulsions.

  • The superior labrum consists of dense fibrocartilage
    and elastin that connects the superior and middle cap-
    sular ligaments and long head of the biceps to the gle-
    noid.

  • Common normal variants include a fovea, a Buford
    complex, and a peel-back labrum. The fovea is an
    incomplete anterior superior labral attachment to the
    glenoid with a hole or thin fibrous tissue between the
    labrum and the glenoid (Cooper et al, 1992). A Buford
    complex is a thickened middle glenohumeral ligament
    band that inserts at the biceps labral junction with an
    absent anterior superior labrum (William, Snyder, and
    Buford, 1994). A large fovea or superior labral
    absence may mistakenly resemble an avulsion injury.
    The posterior superior labrum may be attached to the
    glenoid neck rather than to the articular surface.
    Variations of labral attachment can be normal embry-
    onic variants or repetitive activity adaptations.

  • Normal variants may predispose shoulders to addi-
    tional injuries. Buford complexes do not have antero-
    superior labrum. Visualizing below the biceps and
    labrum often demonstrates abnormal wear suggesting
    instability of the biceps anchor.

  • Superior labral tears (SLAP tears) have been classi-
    fied by Snyder as type I degenerative, type II avulsion,
    type III bucket-handle tears, and type IV combined
    labral tear and biceps insertion split (Snyder, Banas,


and Karzel, 1995). Expanded classification includes
extension of Bankart lesions (Maffet, Gartsman, and
Moseby, 1995), associated rotator cuff articular-side
pathology, continuations of ganglion cysts.


  • The anatomy can be arthroscopically visualized in a
    static and dynamic exam. The peel-back labrum can
    be seen arthroscopically as loss of posterior superior,
    glenoid contact when the shoulder is placed in abduc-
    tion and external rotation (Burkhart and Morgan,
    1998). An otherwise normal finding may increase
    with repetitive stresses leading to a painful condition.


SUPERIOR LABRUM FUNCTION


  • Superior labrum contributes to superior, anteroinfe-
    rior, and posterior glenohumeral stability. Superior
    humeral head translation can be reduced with secure
    attachment of the superior labrum and its biceps and
    capsular attachments. Investigators have increased
    anteroinferior translation after creating superior labral
    tears (Rodosky, Harner, and Fu, 1994; Pagnani et al,
    1995). In addition, arthroscopists have noted SLAP
    tears associated with some cases of posterior instabil-
    ity, multidirectional shoulder instability (Abrams,
    2003).

  • The rotator cuff interval plays a role in stabilizing the
    adducted shoulder (Harryman et al, 1992). This inter-
    val consists of the superior labrum, superior gleno-
    humeral ligament, middle glenohumeral ligament, and
    coracohumeral ligament. Reduction of an enlarged
    interval has decreased inferior translation or sulcus,
    reduced anterior translation, and external rotation aug-
    menting anterior repairs, and reduced posterior trans-
    lation augmenting posterior repairs.

  • Superior translation of the humeral head can be lim-
    ited with an intact superior labrum and biceps anchor
    with the humerus in external rotation (Abrams, 1991).
    The long head of the biceps attaches to the superior
    labrum and glenoid tubercle. When the shoulder is in
    the cocked throwing position (abduction, external
    rotation, and extension), the head is translated poste-
    riorly (Howell et al, 1988). Capsular changes and
    tears in the superior labrum may alter these relation-
    ships.

  • The superior labrum may contribute to articular
    lesions on the undersurface of the rotator cuff. Internal
    impingement is a common pathologic finding in over-
    head throwers with shoulder pain. Excessive contact
    of the posterosuperior labrum with the supraspinatus
    during early acceleration can create partial-thickness
    rotator cuff tears. Subscapularis tears can abrade on
    the anterosuperior labrum with flexion and interval
    rotation.


282 SECTION 4 • MUSCULOSKELETAL PROBLEMS IN THE ATHLETE

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