Purpose Of The Study: The aim of this paper is to present an unusual lesion associating anterior instability of the shoulder with a fracture of the horizontal part of the coracoid process. It emphasizes surgical treatment using the Latarjet procedure.
Material And Methods: Three cases are presented: One case was a recurrent anterior dislocation of the shoulder associated with a fracture of the horizontal part of the coracoid process; an other case was a painful shoulder associated with pseudarthrosis of the coracoid process and a fracture of the anterior and inferior edge of the glenoid. In the last case there was a recurrent dislocation of the shoulder associated with a pseudarthrosis of the coracoid process detected intra-operatively. All the patients were operated on using the Latarjet's procedure using the fractured coracoid process.
Results: The three cases had a good result.
Discussion: The association of an anterior dislocation of the shoulder and a fracture of the coracoid process is very unusual. It is often unrecognized because of poor knowledge of this lesion or a poor quality of the radiograms performed in the emergency room. The most likely mechanism is a direct impact of the humeral head against the coracoid process during the dislocation. The fracture is located (as in our 3 cases) at the horizontal part of the coracoid process near its elbow and they are often associated lesions at the anterior and inferior edge of the glenoid. The diagnosis requires good quality radiograms and a Garth's view systematically performed after reducing the dislocation. When the shoulder is painful or unstable, surgical treatment is performed and the Latarjet's procedure takes care of the pseudarthrosis and the instability of the shoulder.
Conclusion: Isolated fractures of the coracoid process are probably uncommon. When there is a fracture of the horizontal part of the coracoid process anterior instability of the shoulder should be suspected. This is the case when the shoulder has never been dislocated and when the standard radiograms are "normal" without "crossing lesions" at the anterior and inferior edge of the glenoid or at the humeral head (Hill-Sach lesion).
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