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AI-powered shoulder dislocation analysis on MRI and X-ray. Detect Hill-Sachs lesions, Bankart fractures, and capsular injuries contributing to instability. Multi-model analysis for recurrence risk assessment.
The shoulder (glenohumeral joint) is the most commonly dislocated major joint. Anterior dislocations account for approximately 95% of cases. Imaging after dislocation evaluates for associated injuries including Hill-Sachs lesions (compression fractures of the posterolateral humeral head), Bankart lesions (labral avulsions), glenoid bone loss, and rotator cuff tears. Our AI consortium assesses both bony and soft tissue injuries to provide comprehensive post-dislocation assessment relevant to recurrence risk and treatment planning.
A Hill-Sachs lesion is a posterosuperior impaction fracture of the humeral head created when it engages the anterior glenoid rim during anterior dislocation. It appears on axial MRI or CT as a wedge-shaped cortical depression at the posterosuperior humeral head and is best seen on axial T2-FS images or CT with 3D reconstruction. A Bankart lesion is the complementary injury — an anteroinferior labral avulsion, with or without an attached osseous fragment (bony Bankart). MR arthrogram best demonstrates the soft-tissue Bankart lesion as contrast tracking into the labral detachment on axial images. The combination of a large engaging Hill-Sachs lesion and a significant bony Bankart defect increases recurrent instability risk and influences surgical planning.
Recurrence risk after a first-time anterior shoulder dislocation is strongly age-dependent. Patients younger than 20 years have recurrence rates approaching 80–90%, while those over 40 years have rates below 15%, partly due to concurrent rotator cuff tears that stabilize the joint. High-demand athletes and military personnel have similarly elevated recurrence risks. MRI findings that predict recurrence include large Hill-Sachs lesions, significant Bankart labral damage, capsular laxity, and anterior glenoid bone loss. Early surgical stabilization with arthroscopic Bankart repair is increasingly recommended for young active individuals after a first-time dislocation to reduce the cumulative damage caused by recurrent episodes.
The Latarjet procedure — transfer of the coracoid process with its attached conjoint tendon to the anterior glenoid — is preferred when anterior glenoid bone loss exceeds approximately 20–25% of the glenoid surface, or when an engaging Hill-Sachs lesion creates an off-track bipolar lesion that puts an arthroscopic soft-tissue repair at unacceptably high risk of failure. CT with 3D surface subtraction reconstruction or MRI best quantifies glenoid bone loss. The Latarjet provides a triple stabilizing effect: bony augmentation of the glenoid arc, the sling effect of the conjoint tendon, and the capsulorrhaphy. Recurrence rates with the Latarjet are lower than with soft-tissue repair in high-risk instability cases.
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