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to analyse the location and the percentage of bone loss in both the humeral head and glenoid in addition to the associated fractures. These factors help determining the treatment strategies for each patient. Reverse Hill Sachs lesion, posterior
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the glenoid concavity and the posterior bumper effect, with or without reverse remplissage to address reverse Hill-Sachs lesions, having good clinical results in the absence of glenoid defects ( 8 , 9 ). The presence of traumatic or erosive glenoid
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for Reverse Hill-Sachs lesions after posterior locked shoulder dislocation fracture: a case series of six patients . Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery 2007 127 543 – 548 . ( https://doi.org/10.1007/s00402-007-0359-y ) 12 Moroder P
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usually a result of direct trauma or seizure. 51 In this case, an anterior-superior impaction fracture (‘reverse Hill–Sachs lesion’ or RHSL, first described by McLaughlin) is created by the postero-inferior glenoid rim and can be present in about 86
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FORE (Foundation for Research and Teaching in Orthopedics, Sports Medicine, Trauma, and Imaging in the Musculoskeletal System), Meyrin, Switzerland
Division of Orthopaedics and Trauma Surgery, Department of Surgery, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland
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(A) Anteroposterior plain radiograph showing Hill–Sachs and reverse Hill–Sachs lesions. (B) Axial CT arthrogram of the right shoulder showing the presence of a Hill–Sachs and reverse Hill–Sachs lesion. Physical examination: There will be
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Faculty of Medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland
Division of Orthopaedics and Trauma Surgery, Department of Surgery, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland
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treatment . Surg Clin North Am 1963 ; 43 : 1621 – 1622 . 57. Krackhardt T Schewe B Albrecht D Weise K . Arthroscopic fixation of the subscapularis tendon in the reverse Hill–Sachs lesion for traumatic