C

CD Morgan

DuPont (United States)

Publishes on Shoulder Injury and Treatment, Shoulder and Clavicle Injuries, Foot and Ankle Surgery. 3 papers and 1.2k citations.

3Publications
1.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Type II SLA <i>P</i> lesions: three subtypes and their relationships to superior instability and rotator cuff tears
CD Morgan, SS Burkhart, Michael Palmeri et al.|Arthroscopy The Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery|1998
Cited by 638

One hundred two type II SLAP lesions without associated anterior instability, Bankart lesion, or anterior inferior labral pathology were surgically treated under arthroscopic control. There were three distinct type II SLAP lesions based on anatomic location: anterior (37%), posterior (31%), and combined anterior and posterior (31%). Preoperatively, the Speed and O'Brien tests were useful in predicting anterior lesions, whereas the Jobe relocation test was useful in predicting posterior lesions. Rotator cuff tears were present in 31% of patients and were found to be lesion-location specific. In posterior and combined anterior-posterior lesions, a drive-through sign was always present (despite absence of anterior-inferior labral pathology or a Bankart lesion) and was eliminated by repair of the posterior component of the SLAP lesion. We conclude that SLAP lesions with a posterior component develop posterior-superior instability that manifests itself by a secondary anterior-inferior pseudolaxity (drive-through sign), and that chronic superior instability leads to secondary lesion-location-specific rotator cuff tears that begin as partial thickness tears from inside the joint.

The peel‐back mechanism: its role in producing and extending posterior type II SLA <i>P</i> lesions and its effect on SLA <i>P</i> repair rehabilitation
SS Burkhart, CD Morgan|Arthroscopy The Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery|1998
Cited by 533

A previously undescribed mechanism of injury for posterior Type II SLAP lesions is described. The primary feature of this mechanism is a torsional peel-back of the posterosuperior labrum. Secure fixation by posterior-superior placement of suture anchors into the posterosuperior corner of the glenoid is essential. The repair must be protected against torsional peel-back forces by avoiding external rotation beyond 0 degrees for 3 weeks.