Rim rent tear of rotator cuff

Changed by Arvin Haghighat, 7 Sep 2023
Disclosures - updated 7 Sep 2023: Nothing to disclose

Updates to Article Attributes

Body was changed:

A rim rent tear of the rotator cuff, also known as partial articular surface tendon avulsion, is a specific subtype of partial-thickness rotator cuff tear that involves the articular surface footprint at the site of tendon attachment into the greater tubercle 2. Such small tears can extend along the tendon fibres, causing tendon delamination, which corresponds to Snyder’s III or IV classification.

This sort of tear is relatively common and also can involve the infraspinatus tendon 3.

Involvement of the bursal surface can also occur (reverse partial articular surface tendon avulsion).

Epidemiology

partialPartial articular surface tendon avulsion lesions are frequent in overhead athletes, younger people and smoker patients.

Pathology

  • intrinsic factors

    • ageing with changes in rotator cuff vascularity and metabolic changes associated

  • extrinsic factors

    • shear stresses on the supraspinatus tendon from narrowing of the coracoacromial arch (extrinsic impingement)

    • microtrauma from repetitive contact of the articular surface of the supraspinatus and infraspinatus tendons with the posterosuperior part of the glenoid during arm abduction and lateral rotation

Clinical presentation

Not all partial articular surface tendon avulsion lesions are symptomatic. Often shoulder pain when lifting outwards, overhead and throwing.

Radiographic features

Plain radiograph

X-ray of the shoulder with an anteroposterior view, axillary lateral view and a supraspinatus outlet view are not specific.

Ultrasound

It may be seen as an echogenic edge and a cortical defect at the footprint. However anisotropy artifacts often make it challenging to recognise partial articular supraspinatus tendon avulsion by ultrasound.

MRI

Partial articular surface tendon avulsion lesions appear in coronal T2 images and inGlenohumeral arthrographyaslinear fluid signal defects at the articular surface of the supraspinatus tendon, near the attachment (footprint) on bone interface.

Treatment and prognosis

Initially conservative treatment with activity modification, without overhead or pain-provoking actions, and physical therapy.

Surgery if the pain is not coming down by three to six months of nonoperative treatment and than one half of the thickness of the supraspinatus tendon is torn.

Surgical options
  • arthroscopic debridement of the tear

  • debridement with acromioplasty

  • rotator cuff repair with or without acromioplasty

History and etymology

The term “rim-rent” was first used by the American surgeon Ernest Armory Codman in 1934 3,4.

  • -<p>A <strong>rim rent tear </strong>of the <a href="/articles/rotator-cuff">rotator cuff</a>, also known as <strong>partial articular surface tendon avulsion</strong>, is a specific subtype of partial-thickness <a href="/articles/rotator-cuff-tear">rotator cuff tear</a> that involves the articular surface <a href="/articles/footprint-of-the-rotator-cuff" title="Footprint of the rotator cuff">footprint</a> at the site of tendon attachment into the greater tubercle <sup>2</sup>. Such small tears can extend along the tendon fibres, causing tendon delamination, which corresponds to Snyder’s III or IV classification.</p><p>This sort of tear is relatively common and also can involve the <a href="/articles/infraspinatus-muscle-1">infraspinatus tendon</a> <sup>3</sup>.</p><p>Involvement of the bursal surface can also occur (reverse partial articular surface tendon avulsion).</p><h4>Epidemiology</h4><p>partial articular surface tendon avulsion lesions are frequent in overhead athletes, younger people and smoker patients.</p><h4>Pathology</h4><ul>
  • +<p>A <strong>rim rent tear </strong>of the <a href="/articles/rotator-cuff">rotator cuff</a>, also known as <strong>partial articular surface tendon avulsion</strong>, is a specific subtype of partial-thickness <a href="/articles/rotator-cuff-tear">rotator cuff tear</a> that involves the articular surface <a href="/articles/footprint-of-the-rotator-cuff" title="Footprint of the rotator cuff">footprint</a> at the site of tendon attachment into the greater tubercle <sup>2</sup>. Such small tears can extend along the tendon fibres, causing tendon delamination, which corresponds to Snyder’s III or IV classification.</p><p>This sort of tear is relatively common and also can involve the <a href="/articles/infraspinatus-muscle-1">infraspinatus tendon</a> <sup>3</sup>.</p><p>Involvement of the bursal surface can also occur (reverse partial articular surface tendon avulsion).</p><h4>Epidemiology</h4><p>Partial articular surface tendon avulsion lesions are frequent in overhead athletes, younger people and smoker patients.</p><h4>Pathology</h4><ul>

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