# Combined Hill-Sachs remplissage and Latarjet procedure: does glenoid track help decision making?

**Authors:** Bastien Bige, Nicolas Recanatesi, Jean Francois Gonzalez, Marc-Olivier Gauci

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.jseint.2025.03.014 · JSES International · 2025-04-16

## TL;DR

This study compares two surgical treatments for shoulder instability to determine which is more effective in preventing dislocation recurrence.

## Contribution

The study evaluates the role of glenoid track measurements in deciding whether to combine Latarjet and Hill-Sachs Remplissage procedures.

## Key findings

- No dislocations occurred in patients who had the combined Latarjet and Hill-Sachs Remplissage procedure.
- Glenoid track measurements alone are not sufficient to guide surgical decision-making.
- Patients with an Instability Severity Index score over 6 are at higher risk of recurrence and should consider combined procedures.

## Abstract

We aim to analyze recurrence of dislocation after Latarjet bone block with or without Hill-Sachs Remplissage (HSR) to specify the indication of a combined procedure.

We analyzed 118 patients with a bipolar lesions and a minimum follow-up of 2 years. All procedures were performed arthroscopically by 3 surgeons in on center. Preoperative and postoperative computed tomography (CT) scans were collected. We also collected preoperative and postoperative clinical scores Two groups were identified: 30 patients with arthroscopic Latarjet bone block combined with a HSR (group I) and 88 patients with an isolated Latarjet (group II). Measurements were performed on a reformatted shoulder CT-scan. On preoperative CT-scans, we measured the glenoid bone loss, the width and the length of the humeral lesion then the glenoid track and Hill-Sachs interval.

The mean follow-up is 6 years. Five dislocations occurred in group II, none in group I. The area of glenoid bone loss was higher in group I than in group II (33.4% ± 4.5% vs. 20.5% ± 8.9%, P = .001). Twenty shoulders presented an Off-Track lesion preoperatively that was always compensated postoperatively by the bone block in group I. No cutoff was found to be discriminating enough to help in the decision-making process. All recurrences had an Instability Severity Index score > 6.

No recurrence occurred in Group I. However, 5 patients (6%) in Group II experienced a recurrent dislocation with no significant difference. Glenoid track is not an isolated argument to indicate an isolated bone block procedure or a combined HSR. The risk of recurrence increases in patients with an Instability Severity Index score over 6 and in this case, a combine procedure should be recommended.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** humeral (MESH:D006810), bone (MESH:D001847), bipolar lesions (MESH:D001714), dislocation (MESH:D004204)
- **Chemicals:** Hill (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

42 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12281291/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12281291