The following x-rays are of a patient who had two prior surgeries and had zero degrees of shoulder external rotation in full adduction. In 90 degrees of abduction the external rotation was to 0 and internal rotation to 45 degrees. Active forward elevation was to 70 degrees.
There is post-collapse avascular necrosis with dense bone proximally on the Grashey view. On the axillary view the there is posterior subluxation on a Walch type B glenoid.
Preop planning to assess how much bone needs to be removed with humeral cut
Posterior subluxation of the humerus relative to glenoid
Based on the work of Saltzman, Mercer et al.
J Shoulder Elbow Surg. 2011 Apr;20(3):363-71. A reproducible and practical method for documenting the position of the humeral head center relative to the scapula on standardized plain radiographs.
The dense AVN and hard bone required the use of the flexible reamers for reaming to avoid iatrogenic fracture or penetration
The plate was retained and the center of rotation reproduced with a short stem hemi prosthesis
Anterior inferior eccentric head and anterior eccentric humeral canal reaming and implant position eliminated the subluxation
The surgery was completed with implantation of a short non cemented stem by removing proximal locking and non locking screws. The benefit of this approach is the following:
1. Less soft tissue dissection
2. Preservation of the plate, eliminates the risk of stress riser development through the screw holes of the plate
3. If cemented is required there is no distal cement extravasation
4. Overlapping of the prosthesis with the plate minimizes the risk of stress riser between the two implants
5. Eccentric humeral head directed anteriorly or anterio-inferiorly corrects the posterior subluxation of the humeral head as seen on axillary x-ray.
6. Most importantly, a future revision surgery is not complicated as removal of the undersized non cemented stem is easy with preserved proximal humeral bone.
Patient selection is important when a decision is made to use this approach in revision cases.