HomeMen's SportsFootballSports Docs Weekly Blitz: Shoulder separations

Sports Docs Weekly Blitz: Shoulder separations

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Want to book Dr. Warme for an appointment? CLICK HERE to check out his impressive profile with the McFarland Clinic. 

Dr. Warme here.

I’m just back from a two week trip to France where I was travelling with USA Wrestling as its team physician for the Junior World Championships. It was an awesome trip and the USA had some decent success.

I’m excited to be back home and back working alongside Drs. Buck and Greenwald on the Jack Trice sidelines. This week I want to address a relatively rare and sometimes confusing sports injury: the Shoulder Separation.

This injury generally results from a direct blow to the top of the shoulder, such as when a quarterback is sacked and the shoulder in driven into the ground. Treatment of these injuries have evolved over time and demonstrate the progress in technology we have in Sports Medicine, as we can now treat many of these cases that need surgery with arthroscopic surgery instead of open surgery.

In contrast to Shoulder Dislocations, which occur when the ball (Humeral Head) comes out of the socket (Glenoid), Shoulder Separations occur when the collar bone (Clavicle) dissociates from the top of the shoulder blade (Acromion). Shoulder separations are also commonly called “AC separations” (Acromion-Clavicle Separation).

An important difference between the glenohumeral joint and the AC joint is that the AC joint is not a gliding joint with articular cartilage responsible for shoulder motion. See the images below for the injured shoulder, the arthroscopically repaired AC separation, and a view of the skin portals used in such a case.

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Most cases of AC separations are low-grade injuries treated without surgery, and often athletes don’t miss much competition. There are even 2lots of quarterbacks in the NFL who have had shoulder separations to their throwing shoulders who have not lost much time to the injury and continue to compete at an elite level.

In severe or symptomatic chronic cases, surgical fixation and/or reconstruction can be considered to restore the anatomy and treat the symptoms. Historically, AC surgery was done through an open technique but recently, arthroscopic techniques have been developed.

Arthroscopic AC surgery minimizes surgical pain and can be done on an outpatient basis. As Orthopedic Sports Medicine continues to advance, arthroscopic techniques will continue to be developed as an alternative to open surgery, and this injury pattern highlights that trend.

Chris Williams
Chris Williamshttp://www.CycloneFanatic.com
Chris was hired as Cyclone Fanatic’s publisher in the fall of 2009. He is Iowa State football's postgame show host on the Cyclone Radio Network and can be heard daily from 4-7 on Des Moines' top-rated sports station, 1460 KXnO. Williams, a 2007 graduate of Iowa State’s Greenlee School of Journalism, is the former publisher of the old CycloneNation.com (Scout.com). He has also written for the Des Moines Register, the Ames Tribune, CycloneReport.com and is the former sports director at KMA Radio. When Williams isn’t working, you can usually find him doing something outdoors with his wife Ashley, daughter Camryn, and Golden Retriever Dierks. He enjoys golfing, boating, country music, the Minnesota Vikings, Atlanta Braves and is passionate about any and all motor sports so finding Williams at a local dirt track is very common.

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