Labral morphology does not compensate for reduced bony glenoid concavity in stable shoulders
Alexander J. Vervaecke, Charles Thery, Victor Housset, Philipp Moroder, Jean-David Werthel

TL;DR
This study found that the labrum in the shoulder does not compensate for reduced bony support in stable shoulders.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence that labral morphology does not compensate for reduced bony glenoid concavity in stable shoulders.
Findings
There was no significant correlation between bony and labral concavity measures.
Subgroup analysis showed no difference in labral concavity between patients with low and high bony concavity.
Inter-rater reliability for measurements was good, supporting the validity of the findings.
Abstract
Glenoid concavity plays a critical role in shoulder stability via the concavity-compression mechanism. While the bony glenoid concavity, quantified by the bony shoulder stability ratio (BSSR), is a known determinant of stability, the labrum also contributes to the overall glenoid concavity. It remains unclear whether the labrum compensates for reduced bony concavity in stable shoulders. This study aimed to investigate the relationship between labral and bony glenoid concavity implementing the labral shoulder stability ratio (LSSR) and BSSR, respectively. We hypothesized that shoulders with reduced bony concavity (lower BSSR) would demonstrate increased labral concavity (higher LSSR), suggesting a compensatory mechanism. In this retrospective imaging study, 36 patients (mean age: 26.7 years) undergoing shoulder computed tomography arthrography between January 2020 and December 2024 for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsShoulder Injury and Treatment · Shoulder and Clavicle Injuries · Nerve Injury and Rehabilitation
