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Relationship between acromial morphological variation and subacromial impingement: A three-dimensional analysis

Author

Listed:
  • Xinyu Li
  • Wei Xu
  • Ning Hu
  • Xi Liang
  • Wei Huang
  • Dianming Jiang
  • Hong Chen

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the association of acromial morphology and subacromial impingement. Methods: Bilateral shoulder computed tomography was performed in 138 patients who received shoulder arthroscopy. Measured parameters included: acromial tilt (AT), modified acromial tilt (mAT), acromial slope (AS), acromiohumeral interval (AHI), lateral acromial angle (LAA), acromial index (AI), critical shoulder angle (CSA), acromial anterior protrusion (AAP), and acromial inferior protrusion (AIP). Acromial morphological characteristics were compared between groups. Side-to-side differences were assessed between affected and non-affected shoulders. Intra- and inter-observer agreements for each parameter were calculated. Results: AT (25.90 vs. 29.41°), mAT (18.88 vs. 22.64°), and AHI (5.46 vs. 6.47 mm) were significantly smaller in impinged patients. The impingement group demonstrated significantly larger AI (63.50 vs. 59.84%), CSA (31.78 vs. 28.74°), AAP (7.13 vs. 5.32 mm), and AIP (5.51 vs. 4.04 mm). Regarding side-to-side comparison, the acromial morphology was significantly different between the affected and non-affected shoulders in impinged patients, while the difference was slight and insignificant in control patients. All, except AS and LAA, measured parameters demonstrated good intra- and inter-observer agreements. Conclusions: Three-dimensional reconstructed CT scan is a reliable method to measure shoulder morphology. The acromial morphological variation is related with sub acromial impingement, however, the causal relationship of them should be further explored.

Suggested Citation

  • Xinyu Li & Wei Xu & Ning Hu & Xi Liang & Wei Huang & Dianming Jiang & Hong Chen, 2017. "Relationship between acromial morphological variation and subacromial impingement: A three-dimensional analysis," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 12(4), pages 1-15, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0176193
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0176193
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