The etiology of anteroinferior glenohumeral instability is multifactorial. Successful treatment of this condition requires to identify and repair all clinically significant lesions which may be causing shoulder instability. An erosion of the glenoid is quite a common phenomenon in chronic anterior shoulder instability. Together with a Hill-Sachs lesion, a glenoid bone lesion often coexists in anterior shoulder dislocation.
CITATION STYLE
Taverna, E., Garavaglia, G., & Ufenast, H. (2014). Glenoid bone loss: Arthroscopic bone grafting. In Shoulder Arthroscopy: Principles and Practice (pp. 441–449). Springer-Verlag London Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-5427-3_36
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