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Beaumont Doctors Specializing in Sports Medicine

Beaumont Doctors Specializing in Sports Medicine. Shoulder Surgery for Instability. Arthroscopic vs. open Bankart repair Capsular “shrinkage” for subtle instability Open capsular shift for multidirectional instability SLAP repair for torn labrum or biceps anchor. Anatomy. Anatomy.

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Beaumont Doctors Specializing in Sports Medicine

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  1. Beaumont Doctors Specializing in Sports Medicine

  2. Shoulder Surgery for Instability • Arthroscopic vs. open Bankart repair • Capsular “shrinkage” for subtle instability • Open capsular shift for multidirectional instability • SLAP repair for torn labrum or biceps anchor

  3. Anatomy

  4. Anatomy

  5. Anatomy

  6. Arthroscopy

  7. Instability Traumatic (Unidirectional) versus Chronic (Multidirectional)

  8. InstabilityTraumatic

  9. InstabilityTraumatic Normal Dislocated

  10. InstabilityTraumatic Normal Dislocated

  11. InstabilityTraumatic MRI

  12. InstabilityTraumatic

  13. Bankart Repair - Open

  14. Bankart Repair - Arthroscopic

  15. Bankart Repair - Arthroscopic

  16. Chronic or Multidirectional Instability

  17. Capsular Shift - Open

  18. Capsular Shrinkage - Arthroscopic

  19. Capsular Shrinkage - Arthroscopic

  20. Associated Injuries

  21. Axillary Nerve “Stretch”

  22. Rotator Cuff Tear

  23. SLAP Tear

  24. SLAP Tear - Variants

  25. SLAP Tear MRI

  26. SLAP Tear Normal Torn

  27. SLAP Debridement

  28. SLAP Repair

  29. Goal Shoulder that is pain free, does not dislocate, and can be trusted

  30. Possible Risks and Complications • Anesthetic • Nerve or vessel injury • Pain • Stiffness • Infection • Continued instability

  31. Rehab • Initial degree of protection depends on procedure • Typical protection period is 4 to 6 weeks • Followed by physical therapy 3x/ week x 6 to 12 weeks • Expect 3 to 6 months for full recovery

  32. No surgery is ever “guaranteed,” but shoulder stabilization surgery is a highly successful

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