The normal shoulder consists of three joints. These are the glenohumeral joint (this is the joint that actually moves our shoulder and is shaped like a ball and socket), acromioclavicular joint, sternoclavicular joint and the joint between the chest cavity and the shoulder blade. They are scapulothoracic joints.
The rotator cuff consists of four muscles that connect the shoulder blade to the arm bone. These muscles are called rotator cuffs because they wrap around this ball-and-socket-shaped joint in the form of a cuff. Rotator cuff muscles press the ball into the socket during shoulder movements and provide a stable platform for rotation movements during this movement.
Our muscles attach to the bone they will work with in the form of tendons, that is, tendons.
Tears in the shoulder usually occur in the supraspinatus muscle, or rather in its tendon (also known as the tendon), shown below.
Rotator The cuff muscles are squeezed during daily movements between the shoulder blade and the bone called the acromion seen above, as seen in the figure below. This phenomenon is called compression or '' impegement '' in medical language.
Rotator cuff tears occur in the advanced stages of compression. Apart from this, ruptures of the shoulder, or rotator cuff, muscles can also occur as a result of repetitive daily overhead movements that continue for a long time (such as housework, knitting or heavy lifting) or a sudden trauma (such as sudden strain on the arm after sudden braking on a bus).
The result is a TEar.
The small anchor called anchorused in tear repair (patients use it as a screw) also known). Metal on the left of the 1 TL used below; i on the right The dimensions of the dissolvable anchor are shown here.
Arthroscopic shoulder procedures are entered with various surgical instruments through small holes called PORTAL on the front, back and sides of your shoulder. The procedure is performed by directly reaching the problem areas of your shoulder joint and providing vision with the help of a monitor.
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