2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.jse.2007.04.011
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Arthroscopic prevalence of pulley lesions in 1007 consecutive patients

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Cited by 61 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…A pulley system lesion can be caused by acute trauma, repetitive microtrauma or degenerative changes, or injury associated with a rotator cuff tear [8][9][10][11]. The lesion of the pulley system has been identified as the Bprimum movens^in the LHB instability cascade and can cause a persistent shoulder pain refractory to conservative treatment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A pulley system lesion can be caused by acute trauma, repetitive microtrauma or degenerative changes, or injury associated with a rotator cuff tear [8][9][10][11]. The lesion of the pulley system has been identified as the Bprimum movens^in the LHB instability cascade and can cause a persistent shoulder pain refractory to conservative treatment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…in a combination of a lesion of the SGHL and a deep surface tear of the subscapularis tendon (type III pulley lesion according to Habermeyer et al [14]) because it constitutes for an extremely safe and reliable procedure leading to only minimal complication and revision rates [4]. In contrast, the stability of the pulley system in isolated lesions of the SGHL (type I pulley lesion according to Habermeyer et al [14]) is not impaired, and electrothermal arthroscopic debridement of the SGHL without tenodesis is reported to be adequate [1].…”
Section: Intra-operative Findings and Additional Treatmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Neben subakromialer Impingement-Symptomatik finden sich häu- fig gen Läsionen der Supraspinatussehne auf [4], was sekundär in einer instabilen Bizepssehnenführung resultieren kann. In dieser Kombination ist eine konsequente Therapie der Bizepssehne (Tenotomie oder Tenodese) dringend anzuraten, um ein weiteres Fortschreiten der Läsion zu verhindern.…”
Section: Komorbiditätenunclassified