The anatomy of the human shoulder

CHAPTER I

IT would be very convenient for the reader if all that Gray has to say about the structures composing the shoulder could be reprinted here for ready reference. It is not necessary to specify which Gray or even to state the title of his book, although I may note that the date of my own copy is 1887. This young man, for he died when he was only thirty-five, bequeathed a real legacy to almost every English-speaking doctor who has studied medicine since his time. A doctor may throw away his Bible, but he always keeps his Gray. In spite of the convenience it would be to have the standard facts of anatomy at hand, most purchasers of this book would probably prefer to have it published at less expense and to let them refer when necessary to the "Gray's" which they themselves have already thumb-marked. Yet I know that when I read about a subject in which I am only half interested, I do not bother to use reference books as I should, and probably do the author an injustice by not being sure of the fundamental facts which he assumes I know, but which I have in truth forgotten.
The other extreme would be to assume that every doctor who may read this book already knows the standard anatomic structures of the shoulder, so that the whole chapter could be omitted. This alternative cannot be accepted because it is highly probable that even the graduating classes of the best medical schools could hardly qualify in this respect. Later, as year by year passes after graduation, our anatomic memories are crowded out by other more vital ones, so that it is very unlikely that half the fund of knowledge acquired by early anatomic instruction persists a decade. After two decades of practice, any surgeon will admit that he has forgotten such matters as the branches of the brachial plexus or the origin and insertion of the levator anguli scapulae.
Even if my readers know all the well-recognized facts about anatomy, I should still have to write a chapter on the subject to accentuate the proportionate values of certain points which appeal to me. Moreover, there are a few undescribed facts which I need to present. Obviously compromise is necessary for I can neither assume that my readers know their anatomy nor wish me to repeat every detail which they may turn to in their text books. Nevertheless, to do justice to me they should refresh their memories, and for this purpose a list is presented of all the terms which concern the shoulder used by Gray in my own worn edition. By running his eye over this list the reader may detect the weak spots in his own memory and, if he pleases, can turn to his Gray and revivify them. I beseech him to do so. Moreover, since this book is written quite as much for the coming generation as for my own and the present one, this list is presented in three columns so that it may serve as a glossary to all three generations. It appears that the professors of anatomy intend that future medical students in all countries shall be taught the international Basle Anatomic Nomenclature.


The writer believes that numbers 2, 3, and 4 of the above list are essentially one bursa, although they are often separated by thin, movable films of tissue.
He believes numbers 5 and 6 to be really extensions of the joint as is also the synovial lining of the bicipital canal, number 18 in Fig. 18, p. 29.
The bursas numbered 9, 10, 11, 12, in the same diagram, are inconstant and have no official anatomic names.

Even if you have satisfied your mind that each term in the B. N. A. list carries its appropriate picture, let me give you my personal way of thinking of some of the parts of the human shoulder.
 
The shoulder. In descriptive anatomy there are no more sharp lines of distinction separating the regions called the shoulder, the neck, the back, the chest, the upper arm and the armpit, than we indicate in our ordinary uses of these words. Even the bones which compose its skeletal support cannot be sharply defined. Does the upper end of the humerus belong to the shoulder? Anatomists are accustomed to say no, and describe it with the arm. Surgeons certainly think of the upper end as a part of the shoulder, but would have no distinct lower limit. We shall include the upper end of the humerus above the deltoid tubercle, and leave the other limits still somewhat vague.

The shoulder girdle is not a complete girdle because the clavicles are separated by the manubrium  (top of the sternum) in front, and the scapulae do not quite meet behind. In birds the clavicles do meet and form the wish bone, In fact, "girdle" means the two bones of one side only, so it takes two shoulder girdles to not quite girdle the body.   It
means for man the two bones which form a saddle for the arm to ride on the body,
i.e., the scapula and the clavicle, but inbirds and some other creatures it in
cludes the coracoid as a separate bone, which is more massive than the scapula.

FIGURE 1. THE EAGLE

Did time and space permit, it would be instructive to discuss the comparative anatomy of the shoulder in the lower animals, for in different species there is great variation in the relative sizes and shapes of the muscles and bones and even in the proportions of the three component parts of the scapula itself. Most animals have only a trace of the acromion process which in man and in the monkey is extremely well developed, probably to stabilize the joint for its many newly developed uses.
So far as I know, no one has yet attempted to study the reasons which have led to the development of the variations of the different parts of the human scapula. Possibly I was the first to draw attention to a fundamental difference between the human and the quadruped mechanism in the use of the forelimb; i.e., the quadruped uses his supraspinatus to accelerate a pendulum, while in man, in raising the arm, this muscle acts at a disadvantage against gravity and under great strain.


FIGURE 2
The horse swings a pendulum. Man lifts Weight with a long lever.

I hope to convince the reader in later chapters, that rupture of this muscle in man is almost equivalent to dividing the hamstring in an animal. If man walked on his forelegs, patients with this lesion would limp pitiably and get much more sympathy than they do now when they can only allege that they cannot raise their arms.   At any rate, from a mechanical point of view, man's ambitious change to the upright position resulted in a new form of shoulder joint. He has a relatively large and powerful acromion process to act as the mast of a derrick, to which his enormously developed deltoid is attached, and under which a relatively small supraspinatus is chiefly useful in holding the boom (humerus) on the fulcrum (the glenoid). We are proud that our brains are more developed than those of animals; we might also boast of our clavicles. It seems to me that the clavicle is one of man's greatest skeletal inheritances, for he depends to a greater extent than most animals except the apes and monkeys, on the uses of his hands and arms. The clavicle holds the shoulder away from the body and therefore permits us to use our arms with power and skill in abduction and adduction to a degree which few animals except the monkeys can approach. The gorilla's shoulder girdle is as well if not better developed than man's. Some of the lower monkeys have less developed ones resembling those of the quadrupeds, but all have clavicles.


FIGURE 8.    THE SCAPULA OF A GORILLA
The gorilla's scapula is even more highly specialized than man's. I have never had the opportunity to dissect a gorilla, but he must have a well-developed subacromial bursa. Our relative also has a good clavicle, which seems small in this figure because it is foreshortened. Like a human clavicle it is S-shaped.

Mammals that specialize in swimming (e.g., seals and whales) or in running (dogs, foxes, wolves) or in grazing (horses, cows, deer, pigs and other hoofed animals) have no clavicles. Even the carnivorous cat tribe (lions, tigers, leopards and the domestic cat) have only rudimentary or very small collar bones. In the bats, the clavicles are long and curved like those of birds. Moles have short, almost cuboid bones which are homologous with the clavicle, combined with the coracoid. Those species which do have clavicles appear to be flyers or climbers. Some of the rodents which climb trees—for instance, squirrels, have them. Other rodents have none whatever. Curiously enough, some of the more ancient but waning species, such as the duckbill platypus, kangaroo, opossum and armadillo, have well-developed clavicles. Furthermore, the armadillo has the longest known acromion process and very few other animals have any to speak of. It appears that the acromion is developed in this animal to aid in carrying his shell.
 
The beaver has the most highly developed clavicle of any four-footed animal that I know of. His skeleton is also notable because he has a well-developed acromion process and a large deltoid tuberosity. His shoulder girdle is the best instance I can find for my theory that animals with strong clavicles use their arms in adduction and abduction, for the beaver's mechanical skill in building his huts and constructing his dams is well known. Bears are my worst examples, for bears are clever in climbing, and yet have no clavicles. The sterno-clavicular joint. Any one can easily feel the joint where his clavicle touches the top of his sternum and realize that this is the only point at which the weight or power of his shoulder can get direct support from the rest of his skeleton when he pushes with his arm. And yet after removal of the clavicle, a man has pretty good use of his shoulder just as do horses and dogs who have no clavicles.

Figure 4. BEAVER

The acromio-clavicular joint. One can feel this at the other end of the clavicle and realize that this, too, must through its small surface transmit power or weight. One can also feel that the clavicular side is higher than the acromial side of the joint. It is an important fact. When one looks at the clavicle from above, one sees no joint surface, but when one looks at it from below one sees a j oint surface at each end. This provides for upward displacement at either extremity, and therefore we never find downward dislocation of either end of the clavicle.

The coracoid process is in shape and size much like a crooked forefinger projecting forward from the neck oi the scapula just as the acromion process projects back of the joint. The outer end of the clavicle crosses it transversely and is very firmly united to it by the coraco-clavicular ligaments which one cannot palpate because they are wholly underneath it. One can just feel the end of this process below the outer end of the clavicle. It seems to be a part of the head of the humerus, but by rotating the latter, one may note motion between the two.

The acromion process. This forms the whole of the posterior part of the top of the shoulder, while the head of the humerus makes the rounded forward outline. The acromion extends well behind the articular head and the plane of its broad end is obliquely downward and backward and outward. Notice on your own shoulder how you can put your finger under the back of it. Notice that you cannot, with a club, hit a man from above or from behind on the top of his humerus, for the acromion is always in the way. If the arm is raised, flexed forward or abducted; i.e., when he is raising his arms to fight or crawling away on hands and knees, the whole humeral head is protected by the acromion and you could not hit the top of it from any direction. If his elbow is drawn backward, you could, from in front, strike on the front of the top of the tuberosities but not on the articular cartilage. This is a very important anatomic point for the surgeon, for only when the arm is in dorsal flexion can one feel the gap where a supraspinatus tendon has been ruptured. It also leads to the conclusion that histories are unreliable which claim an injury to the top of a humerus from a fall or a blow. One cannot fall on the top of one's humerus, or strike any one else on the top of his humerus.

FIGURE 6.    THE SHOULDER SEEN FROM ABOVE
The head of the humerus is completely protected from above and behind, and the contour in front is formed by the tuberosities.
The inner contour on which the thumb naturally comes when the shoulder is grasped is formed by the tip of the coracoid.
The forefinger sinks under the edge of the acromion. Notice that part of the facet for the infraspinatus lies in front of that of the supraspinatus, and compare with Fig. 9.
The position of the bicipital groove varies with the degree of rotation of the arm. Try this grasp on your own shoulder and rotate the humerus with the elbow flexed to a right angle. Bear in mind that the bicipital groove lies just outside of the median line of the upper arm in the anatomic position.

The spine of the scapula is the long base of the acromion and there are two little bony lumps on its lower edge which one can always feel and which are very useful as measuring points. The dorsal surfaces of the acromion and of the spine of the scapula are subcutaneous ; i.e., there are no muscles between them and the skin. Evidently the ridge which they form was made to be hit; i.e., to protect the shoulder joint and the brachial plexus from blows from above and behind. Consider the mechanics of its structure and notice how it, with the clavicle, forms a movable arch over the vessels and nerves of the arm. This arch flaps like a wing as you hunch your shoulder and lower it, or abduct your arm and lower it. Observe also that the spine of the scapula rises between the supra- and infraspinatus to give attachment to the superficial layer of great muscles, i.e., the trapezius and the deltoid.   The two sets of muscles would be separated by sawing through the spine of the scapula.   (See Fig. 8.)

FIGURE 7.    THE LIGAMENTS OF THE SHOULDER
The numbers refer to the list of ligaments on page 3.
The arch formed by the coracoid, the coraco-acromial ligament and the under side of the acromion is a hemispheric dome under which the hemisphere formed by the musculo-tendinous cuff and by the tuberosities exactly fits. Under this arch the head of the humerus can move many degrees in all directions by the aid of the subacromial bursa.
The reader must understand that the dissection pictured above is quite artificial. Such a capsule does not exist unless made at the expense of the musculotendinous cuff, a section of which is shown in Fig. 9. One should try to visualize Fig. 8 in combination with this figure, for the supraspinatus fills the gap shown between the numerals 7 and 10 in this figure.

The glenoid is the shallow cartilage-covered surface where the head of the humerus obtains its fulcrum as the arm is raised. Notice that the plane of its surface is at no particular angle with the rest of the scapula, for it faces somewhat forward and upward, and outward.  Notice its narrow superior portion.

The blade. The upper portion of the blade of the scapula from the lateral view forms in most people an obtuse angle with the rest of the blade so that it can fit over the curve of the upper ribs at the base of the neck. Thus the thin blade of the scapula when pressed forward from behind fits nicely over the back of the upper seven ribs. Furthermore, the bony structure of the scapula is beautifully arranged to distribute force applied from behind.

The clavicle is a strut which connects the rest of the shoulder with the skeleton. It prevents the upper portion of the shoulder from jamming up against the rest of the body. In other words, the clavicle acts as does the iron rod a man uses to hold a bull who has a ring in the end of his nose. The clavicle is capable of a limited degree of circumduction, which is facilitated by the double joint at the sternal end. Circumduct your whole arm with the forefinger of the opposite hand on the outer tip of the clavicle and you will find that the latter passes through an irregular circle about three inches in diameter. The clavicle is the boom of a derrick (the neck) and enables the trapezius to raise the whole shoulder.

The ligaments. It is well to distinguish four kinds of ligaments which occur about the shoulder.
(1) Those that pass between two different bones about a joint, such as the capsular ligaments of the sterno-clavicular, the acromioclavicular and the scapulo-humeral joints, or strengthening bands in these capsules such as the superior acromio-clavicular ligament or coraco-humeral and gleno-humeral ligaments which are merely slightly firmer portions of the capsular ligaments.
(2) Those that bind two bones together without a joint but permit a very limited amount of motion. The coraco-clavicular ligament composed of conoid and trapezoid portions is a very typical example.
(3) The interarticular fibro-cartilages are usually classed as ligaments. There are three of these related to the shoulder; a very typical one in the sterno-clavicular joint; a less typical, often rudimentary one in the acromio-clavicular joint; and the glenoidal labrum which encircles the glenoid cavity and makes it slightly deeper.
(4) Those that pass between two processes of one bone in a static manner, apparently with a purpose of restraining the mobility of other structures. In the shoulder there is such a ligament crossing the suprascapular notch through which the nerve and vessel pass. The transverse humeral ligament which makes the bicipital groove into a canal to restrain the long tendon of the biceps, is another. The coraco-acromial ligament is one of this kind, and we must speak of it in more detail.

The coraco-acromial ligament will be mentioned again and again in this volume. It is wholly a scapular ligament, passing between the two processes from which it takes its name which are parts of one bone. Its under surface forms most of the posterior part of the roof of the subacromial bursa, and the tuberosities of the humerus pass upward underneath it when the arm is elevated. It lies between the bursa and the acromio-clavicular joint. Its function appears to be largely to restrain the head of the humerus from gaining a fulcrum on this joint or on the under side of the end of the clavicle. It is more elastic than bone but quite firm. Evidently the coraco-acromial ligament has an important duty and should not be thoughtlessly divided at any operation. One always finds it if the bursal incision is carried upward. The bursa, with this ligament and the two bones to which it is attached, really forms a secondary shoulder joint.  (See Fig. 15.)
The other ligaments with simple but confusing names—the acromio-clavicular and the sterno-clavicular—surround their respective joints and pass between two different bones and have the functions usual in other joints. We have already spoken of the coraco-clavicular ligaments (p. 9) which are not connected with any joint and are the mainstay in binding the shoulder blade by the coracoid process to the collar bone. The coraco-humeral and gleno-humeral ligaments should never have been described as entities. They are merely somewhat variable parts of the joint capsule.

The muscles. I have few particular comments to make about the muscles which seem to be easier to remember from our student days. I would like to call attention to the compact entity formed by the short rotators when the deltoid and trapezius have been removed. When one thinks of the shape of each of these individual muscles, one must remember that the joint is mobile and that the position of the humeral head on the glenoid greatly alters the shape of each muscle attached to its tuberosities.

Taking the group as a unit they form an entity which remains of about the same shape whether the arm is rotated in or out, but each of these muscles becomes hooked around in the direction toward which the humeral head happens to be rotated. Not only is this true, but their shapes are much altered by whether the humerus is pointing downward or upward. I should like to make a plea for teaching the student that in thinking of the shapes of muscles, he should be able to visualize their positions in the extremes of motion of the adjacent joint.
The subclavius muscle is seldom alluded to in practical surgery. Its function seems to be to draw the clavicle down toward the ribs when the former has been raised by the trapezius, either in hunching the shoulder or in abducting the arm. Possibly it has some importance when division of the nerve supply causes contracture, just as the clavicular portion of the pectoral may limit the motion of the arm by contracture when its nerve supply has been destroyed by careless dissection of the axilla. The subclavius is mentioned chiefly because no one has yet reported any clinical condition in which it is an important factor. Here is a chance for original work.


FIGURE 8.    INNER MUSCULAR UNIT
The compact entity made up by the short rotators as a unit, changes its shape very little during rotation of the humerus.

The head of the humerus is very much larger than the glenoid cavity of the scapula on which it rests and on which it has to gain its fulcrum whatever the position of the arm when in use. There is no fulcrum in the standing position with the arm at rest at the side, or in any other position in which the arm is at rest without any of the muscles in use. In such positions of rest, the head of the humerus is held in contact with the glenoid surface by atmospheric pressure.
The capsule of the joint is quite unlike the capsule of other joints, for it must admit of motion in any direction, and hence it cannot have any of its parts in a state of tension when it is in a mid-position; therefore, the capsule is approximately twice as big as the size of the anatomic head of the bone, and any part of its circumference will only be tense when the extreme of motion is reached in the opposite direction.  (Fig. 33.)



FIGURE 9.    INSERTION OF SUPRASPINATUS TENDON
Notice the transverse fibers in the upper portion of the tendon. These are probably some of those of the infraspinatus. See in relation to this Fig. 6, which shows that the insertion of the infraspinatus overlaps that of the supraspinatus to some extent. Each of the other tendons also interlaces its fibers to some extent with its neighbor's tendons. Notice that even with the microscope no distinction can be made between capsule and tendon in this region.
The synovial layer of cells beneath the tendon and the Anger-like processes which attach the tendon to the facet cannot be seen without more magnification.
Notice the dense bone on the surface of the facet. This is increased in density in cases of inflammation and is shown in the X-ray.
Notice the palisade-like structure of the fibro-cartilage which often remains on the bone when the tendon is ruptured. Refer to page 89 for a description of the usual points of rupture.
Notice how close to the rim of the articular cartilage the fibers are attached and that a few of them in this specimen have given way at the very edge.
Notice the lamellated structure of the tendon. It is crinkly because it was detached from the scapula before fixation.

The short rotators. Another peculiarity of the joint is the fact that the tendons of the short rotators, viz., the supraspinatus, the infraspinatus, teres minor and subscapularis, are closely incorporated with the capsule through almost their whole extent. The tendons are broad and flat and only about an inch in length. This matter is spoken of more at length on page 74. It is impossible either to dissect these tendons from the capsule on the one hand, or from the synovial base of the subacromial bursa on the other. Within a half inch of the sulcus which surrounds the cartilaginous head of the bone, even a microscopic section in this region shows no distinction between the tendon substance and the joint capsule. Anatomists have concluded that this arrangement of the tendons prevents the redundant portions of the capsule from getting caught between the articular surfaces as the joint moves. Fig. 9 shows a section through the supraspinatus tendon at the sulcus and illustrates the manner in which the tendon is inserted into the bone.

The student who is taught his anatomy from the dried bones, may get a false impression from having the facets of insertion of the short rotators pointed out to him as specifically the places where these muscles are attached to the bone. As a matter of fact the attachment takes place throughout most of the upper half of the sulcus, which is called the anatomic neck, and which separates the cartilaginous edge from the tuberosities. Doubtless the heavier portions of these tendons are inserted in the smooth facets which anatomists point out on the tuberosities. However, if one excises the head of the humerus with these short rotators attached to it, one finds that the insertions of all four muscles are so intimately incorporated with the capsule, and with each other, that one cannot, even with careful dissection, separate any one tendon from the neighboring tendon. This fused structure will be alluded to as the musculo-tendinous cuff.

This musculo-tendinous cuff does not extend completely around the head of the bone.   It occupies approximately the upper half of the circular depression, called the anatomic neck. There are no tendons inserted on the lower axillary side, and in this' region the capsule is reflected farther away from the rim of the cartilage than it is in the portion where the tendons are inserted. There is no very definite mark on the bone on this axillary side to show where the capsule was attached.

FlGURE   10.      MUSCULO-TENDINOUS  CUFF
The inside of the joint is shown from the anterior aspect especially to indicate that there is no sulcus in the upper half of the anatomic neck and that in the lower half of the joint the insertion of the capsule is some distance from the articular rim. Here the bone is covered only by a thin layer of fibrous tissue and synovia.
The capsule has been cut just proximal to the line where it becomes welded into the mus-culo-tendinous cuff. The author wishes to emphasize the fact that in autopsy specimens one frequently finds bare bone between the attachment of the tendons and the articular cartilage and that such conditions are the end results of unrepaired ruptures of the tendon fibers. (Plate V.)

The sulcus and anatomic neck. Looking from the inside of the joint of a fresh cadaver there is no sulcus in the upper portion opposite the attachments of the supra-spinatus and infraspinatus, or opposite most of the adj acent parts of the subscapularis and teres minor. About opposite the middle of the insertion of the teres minor on the one side, and the middle of that of the subscapularis   on  the  other side, the line between the cartilage edge and the insertion of the cuff begins to get broader; i.e., the lower portions of the insertions of the subscapularis and of the teres minor are slightly farther from the articular rim than are the insertions of the other muscles. On both sides, as we pass downward, the line gets broader until at its broadest point, it is nearly a half inch wide on the axillary side of the capsule. (Fig. 10.) The reader must understand that all this refers to the sulcus before the tendons are removed and while the membrane is still intact.  After maceration, the bare bone sulcus (the anatomic neck) is quite the reverse, and is broad where it was formerly narrow. When looking at the bare bone, one sees a deep sulcus (the anatomic neck) between the tuberosities and the rim of the articular surface and one must realize that in life this sulcus is filled by the musculo-tendinous cuff. (See Figs. 9 and 10.) In the bare bone one sees that there are many vascular foramina in this part of the sulcus. The reader should see for himself the points described in this paragraph, because many shoulder symptoms may be accounted for by the evulsion of fibers of insertion at the articular margin of this sulcus. In cases of complete rupture of the tendons the bony sulcus is palpable even through the thick deltoid. (See Fig. 42.) I believe that when at autopsy one finds any sulcus present between the cartilage and the attachment of the supraspinatus, or a broadening of the sulcus opposite the attachments of the other muscles so as to expose bare bone, we have proof that a pathologic condition has existed. I have never seen any mention of one of these rim rents in any book on anatomy, pathology or surgery, yet on examination of these joints at autopsy it is a very common finding. In fact, in aged people it is hard to obtain a perfectly normal shoulder joint, just as it is to find a perfectly normal aorta.

Bursa about the shoulder. It is very difficult to find any accurate description of the subacromial or subdeltoid bursa, and I feel that even if I could give a clear description that I could not in any words convey as much as I could by one demonstration. At the time I first wrote about this bursa its importance was not recognized, and even its anatomic outlines were very poorly described. The main reason for the inaccuracy of our knowledge was that no one had studied it from inside. In dissecting, anatomists removed the deltoid muscle and then described the bursa, the upper portion of which, together with some of the periphery, was necessarily removed with the deltoid. All that was left of the bursa was an inconspicuous portion about the size of a half dollar which remained attached to the greater tuberosity. The portion of the roof, which was attached to the under side of the acromion, would not be noticed. Furthermore, in the average dissecting room specimen, the tissues are badly discolored and the limits of the synovial membrane, which is very thin indeed, are not clearly marked.

The functions and structure of bursa in general should be considered before going any further. Nature provides bursas in many parts of the body where a considerable degree of motion between parts of the anatomy is necessary, and yet no cartilaginous joint is required. Especially is this true where two muscles cross each other in opposite directions, or where a muscle or a tendon and a bone move past each other without actual articular contact.
Some of the best known bursas occur between some portion of the skeleton and the skin over it. The skin is more or less movable over most parts of the body, and the mobility is permitted by the fatty or areolar tissue which lies between it and the deep fascia, but occasionally, as over the patella and over the elbow, the skin must move to a considerable extent, so that spaces are formed in the areolar tissue which allow it to glide over the bony prominences. The prepatellar bursa, for instance, has a base firmly fixed to the upper surface of the patella and a roof firmly fixed to the under surface of the skin. The same is true of the olecranon bursa at the elbow. It is the mobility of the periphery which permits motion rather than the attached parts of the roof and base. .   In other parts of the body bursas lie between bony prominences and fascia or between tendons and muscles, but the principle of attached portions and movable peripheries holds good in all. In the shoulder we have examples of the several kinds; e.g., there is a small subcutaneous bursa over the acromion, and a triangular bursa between the tendinous fibers of the trapezius and the dorsum of the scapula at the base of its spine.

FIGURE II.   BURSAE

Referring to Fig. 11, A-B is the fixed roof of a bursa and C-D is the fixed base.  The periphery A-C and B-D is movable.

FIGURE 12.    BURSA

A-B may move away from C-D or vice versa in any direction even in rotation, but probably not in separation vertically on account of atmospheric pressure.
  
In Figs. 11 and 12 the surfaces have been depicted as if separated, but of course in the normal living tissue these surfaces are in contact and their motion is linear as suggested in Fig. 13. One must realize that the thin, movable periphery sometimes has to fold on itself as base and roof move about. The nictitating folds seen on the inside of a bursa are double layers of the periphery, so very thin that they readily roll on one another as do the membranes which come across a bird's eyes.

In the subacromial bursa the section of the space in most positions is a curved line (Fig. 14) which represents a section through the segment of an almost perfect hemisphere.

FlGURE   14.
This hemisphere is almost a counterpart in size and curvature of the articular surface of the true joint.   (Fig. 15.)

FIGURE 15.    SYMMETRY OF BURSA AND JOINT
The hemisphere of the joint surface is slightly smaller than the hemisphere of the base of the bursa, which functions as an auxiliary joint.

It seems to me that it is very doubtful whether it is best to apply the term bursa to extensions of the joint cavities, such as that beneath the tendon of the quadriceps at the knee. This synovial space is chiefly useful to enable the tendon of the quadriceps to ride over the anterior portions of the condyles of the femur. In a fully flexed knee, practically the whole of this surface has passed downward over the cartilage. It is simpler to regard this so-called quadriceps bursa as part of the synovial lining of the joint, where it does not need a true capsule, because reinforced by muscle.  In the shoulder joint there are two so-called bursae which the anatomists describe (Bursa M. subscapularis and B. M. infraspinati), which to my mind are simply extensions of the joint for the same purpose as that of the quadriceps bursa at the knee. It requires little imagination to see that when the humerus is rotated inward, the infraspinatus bursa would be largely straightened out with the stretched infraspinatus muscle, and vice versa, the subscapularis bursa would likewise become a part of the capsule of the joint in extreme external rotation. (Fig. 83.)

FIGURE 16.    RANGE OF MOVEMENT OF BURSA
The base and roof of the subacromial bursa are somewhat larger than any two circles depicted in this figure, which expresses diagrammatically the extent of motion of the bursa in varying positions of the joint.
To understand this diagram (a) one must visualize the circle labeled "roof" as firmly fixed to the under side of the acromion and the acromio-clavicular ligament, while the circle labeled "base" is firmly fixed to the top and anterior aspect of the tuberosities and to the adjacent half inch of the tendons of the short rotators; an area, in fact, about as large as a silver half dollar. The base, in varying positions of the arm, moves away from the roof; the movable periphery of the bursa tends to straighten out as depicted in the two ellipses shown in the diagram. One may imagine such ellipses in any position of the arm.
Since the bursa is concavo-convex in shape, and since it lies obliquely, it cannot be depicted in a diagram either from the strictly anterior aspect or from above. (See Fig. 44-b.)
b depicts the actual possible extent of motion of the base in relation to the roof, projected as seen from above. The dotted area represents the possible positions to which the base may move. Notice the indentation of the bicipital groove which, during rotation, can pass to any point on the anterior dashed line. The base moves posteriorly as the arm is elevated, and is farthest back in relation to the acromion when the arm is in the pivotal position (cf. Figs. 28 and 26).

On examining many joints from inside the capsule, one does find occasionally that the openings from these bursse, or extensions of the joint, may be considerably smaller than the width of the extensions a little further back than the edge of the glenoid. This gives them the appearance of diverticuli. There is great variation in the size of these openings.
Gray, after describing these two bursal sacs related to the shoulder joint, says, "A third bursal sac, which does not communicate with the joint, is placed between the under surface of the deltoid and the outer surface of the capsule." This description of the subdeltoid or subacromial bursa, which is the only one he gives, is good so far as it goes, but Gray could not have appreciated its extent or its surgical importance or he would have written much more about it. Part of it is placed "between the under surface of the deltoid and the outer surface of the capsule," but that is far from describing its full extent, as will be seen later.
Piersol goes into the description of the bursa in slightly more detail, but it evidently did not greatly interest him and he was not very accurate in regard to it. For instance, he says, "The large subacromial bursa and the subdeltoid bursa have been described as to their possible enlargement;" i.e., he considers that there are two bursae, whereas there is really only one. The fact that he says "as to their enlargement" shows that he did not appreciate that they constituted essentially a secondary joint which needed pages of description on account of its clinical importance. He also says, "Bursas are sacs filled with fluid found in various places where friction occurs between different layers or structures." To describe them as "sacs filled with fluid," gives a wrong impression. They are really spaceless spaces, not filled with fluid, but supplied with a most wonderful self-oiling mechanism, so that their walls glide on one another with their surfaces no farther apart than the thickness of the thinnest sheet of paper. In consequence of this spaceless structure, any method of demonstrating bursae by filling them with opaque materials, as wax, or even with air, causes distention of their cavities and contraction of the periphery. In other words, the circumference of a bursa, when not distended, is very much larger than when it is blown up in the form of a sphere.
Piersol states, "The subdeltoid bursa does not usually communicate with the joint," leaving one to think that it occasionally does communicate. As a matter of fact, when I began my work on the bursa, Dr. Thomas Dwight, who was then Professor of Anatomy at Harvard, disputed my finding ruptures of the supraspinatus which permitted the joint fluid to flow into the bursa. He explained these communications as semi-normal openings between the joint and bursa, similar in structure to the communications of the bursas under the infraspinatus and subscapularis. So positive was he on this point, that it took me a long time to convince him that the instances of communication which we found in his dissecting room were pathologic. So frequent are these ruptures in the ordinary anatomic material, that it is quite natural that the anatomists have thought they were merely instances of persistent congenital anomalies and should have ignored them as the results of a common form of trauma.

The subacromial bursa itself is the largest in the body and the most complicated in structure and in its component parts. It is in fact a secondary scapulo-humeral j oint, although no part of its surface is cartilage. Instead of being between bone and skin, it is between bone and tendon, muscle and bone. It is firmly attached on its base to the upper and outer three-fourths inch of the greater tuberosity, as well as to about a three-fourths inch of the tendons of the four short rotators where they are attached to the tuberosities. Part of its base covers the bicipital groove. Its roof is firmly attached to the under side of the acromion and to the under side of the coraco-acromial ligament, and to the fibers of origin of the deltoid from the edge of the acromion. Its periphery extends loosely downward under the deltoid, backward and outward under the acromion, and inward under the coracoid, between it and the subscapularis, and under the common origin of the short head of the biceps and the coraco-brachialis. The roof and base are in intimate contact and it is lined by synovial membrane, which is almost as thin as a cobweb. Nevertheless this layer has the property of secreting just enough synovial fluid to render the movement between the two surfaces practically frictionless. Beneath this membrane is always a network of fine blood vessels, so that the secretion can be increased or diminished on demand. This arrangement also permits it to become congested in a short time, just as the peritoneum may.
The subacromial bursa is an absolutely necessary part of the shoulder joint. When its surfaces are inflamed so that they cause painful friction, the arm cannot be rotated or abducted. Their complete adhesion has the same effect.
Let us return now to the incision to demonstrate the bursa. One who intends to read this book would save himself much trouble if he could perform on a cadaver the following experiment. Make an incision two inches long from the acromio-clavicular joint downward between the deltoid fibers. The fascia under the deltoid is thin and beneath it will be the roof of the bursa. Pick this up between forceps and incise it as if it were the peritoneum. Enlarge the opening upward until it meets the fibers of the coraco-acromial ligament. Enlarge the incision downward until you arrive at the lower edge of the incised synovial membrane; then pass a probe into the bursa and determine its limits in all directions. You will find that it goes upward beneath the acromion more than three-quarters of an inch; it also extends outward and inward for about the same distance, and you have already opened it an equal extent downward. It is therefore a concavo-convex circular cleft about 1% inches in diameter. Its base is a hemisphere which fits inside its roof, which is the inside of another hemisphere. Its periphery is movable to almost as great an extent as shown in Fig. 16. With the forearm flexed at a right angle, rotate the humerus inward and outward, and the base of the bursa will pass in review across the bottom of your incision. With the arm in extreme internal rotation, mark the most external point on the base which you can see through the incision, then put the arm in extreme external rotation and mark the point on the base which is nearest the inside of the incision. Mark with a knife down to the bone the upper and lower points of the base when the arm is carried into extreme dorsal flexion and extreme frontal flexion. Later on, removing the deltoid, you will be surprised to find that these marks are on the periphery of a circle nearly two and one-half inches in diameter. Next, with retractors in the wound, pull the arm downward so as to allow air to enter the subacromial portion of the bursa. You will find a cavity large enough to put your forefinger in, and you can sweep the finger around to the inner side so that with the arm in internal rotation your finger will pass between the tendon of the subscapularis and the tip of the coracoid process. When you retract the inner edge of the incision and the arm is in internal rotation, you can pass the handle of the knife into the subcoracoid portion of the bursa, which some anatomists have described as a separate bursa, but which in reality is not, although sometimes there is a film of synovial membrane crossing the bursa so as to partially separate this portion from the remainder of the bursa.
If you will repeat this experiment on cadaver after cadaver, you will become convinced that the subacromial bursa,  the subdeltoid bursa and the subcoracoid bursa are one and the same thing, although films of tissue may separate them.

FIGURE 17.    ELEVATION OF SCAPULO-HUMERAL JOINT
Coronal sections of right shoulder in anatomic position and in elevation. These two figures were made for me by Mr. Aitkin in 1908, and have been used as lantern slides on many occasions since. The fact that I publish them again, after twenty-five years of further study of this region, indicates my belief in their essential accuracy. Although drawn from frozen sections they are confessedly semi-diagrammatic. Notice the deltoid and its origin from the edge of the acromion. Notice the subdeltoid or subacromial bursa with its roof made by the under surface of the acromion and by the fascia beneath the upper portion of the deltoid. Its base is on the greater tuberosity and on the tendon of the supraspinatus, which separates it like an inter-articular fibrocartilage from the true joint. b illustrates the condition which would be found in elevation, the tuberosity having passed under the acromion and the point B having passed the point A. It is obvious that the convex floor of the bursa, as it lies on the tendon of the supraspinatus and on the tuberosity, should have a smooth, even, rounded surface. As a matter of fact, the first time one cuts into a normal bursa one is startled to find how much the base looks like the joint itself One cannot distinguish by sight the line between the portions which are on bone or on tendon beneath the shiny base.
It is obvious that if the surfaces of the bursa between the points A and B in a were adherent, it would be impossible for the joint to pass into the position shown in b.
Note for the reader who likes puzzles.
Notice in Fig. b the changes that the axes of the letters A and B have undergone in relation to the bottom of the page. Each letter has rotated twice. The letter A has rotated upward 45° by elevation of the clavicle, but since the clavicle has rotated backward, the artist has had to rotate the vertical axis of the letter in order to make it legible. The letter B has twice rotated, each time in an opposite direction. Once because the artist rotated it on the humerus and once by elevation of the humerus itself. You may not understand this now, but after you have read the next chapter and have mastered Figs. 30 and 31, return to this puzzle and agree with me, only to disagree again, for the B has been inverting as it rotates and should be upside down and right, side out, like the contour of the articular surface.


When the arm is elevated, even the subdeltoid portion becomes subacromial. When the arm is rotated inward some of the subdeltoid portion becomes subcoracoid.
Now if you please, remove the deltoid, being careful to leave the roof of the bursa which is underneath it. When you have examined it again without the deltoid, clear away the portion which was formerly attached to the deltoid and examine the base to see how much overlies the tendons of the short rotators, and how much overlies the tuberosity. You will find that the upper half of the hemisphere lies over the tendons while the lower half lies over the tuberosity, and yet the whole base presents such an even convex surface that it is almost a perfect hemisphere, showing very little sign of the different structures underneath it. By careful palpation, however, you can determine the edge of the tuberosity and the bicipital sulcus. Next, remove the acromion process at its base, and observe the arrangement of the short rotators in relation to the bursa. This is best done by cutting off the muscles of the short rotators from their origins on the scapula, and reflecting them over the head of the humerus. As you reflect them outward over the head of the humerus, you will find that the dissection readily reveals the glenoid portion of the capsule, but when you come within an inch of the insertion of the tendons into the tuberosities you can only separate the tendons from the capsule by sharp division. Leave the short rotators thus inverted over the head of the bone as a boy pulls his sweater halfway over his head, and remove the glenoid attachment of the capsule. Inside the capsule you will find the long head of the biceps free except for its attachment to the upper edge of the glenoid. Now look inside the capsule from the glenoid end and observe the condition of the sulcus which was described on page 17. Note the canal where the biceps tendon follows into the groove through the intertubercular notch. Slit open the groove and follow the tendon down to see where the synovial membrane is reflected. Observe that in doing this you cut across the tendon of the pectoralis major and you pass between the attachments of the pectoralis major on the outer side and those of the teres major and latissimus dorsi on the ridge which forms the inner lip of the groove. Do not forget to examine from the inside of the joint the extensions under the infraspinatus and subscapulars which have been called bursae and were alluded to on page 20.

The subcoracoid portion of the bursa (Bursa M. coraco-brachi-alis) has been described by some anatomists as a separate bursa. Goldthwait   (Am. Jour.  Orth.  Surg.,  May,  1909)   has  attempted to account for certain clinical symptoms as arising from inflammation in this bursa. I regret that I cannot subscribe to Gold-thwait's anatomic description, nor to his interpretation of the clinical symptoms caused by it. I have great admiration for the work which he has done in regard to the conditions in the lumbosacral and sacroiliac regions. He has been a great pathfinder in the treatment of these conditions, but I feel that his articles on the shoulder are less accurate and sometimes misleading. I think that most of the cases which Goldthwait attributes to subcoracoid bursitis are essentially subacromial, for the subcoracoid bursa is only a part of the subacromial bursa. I have already explained that the subacromial bursa in the anatomic position becomes largely subdeltoid, and vice versa, in abduction, becomes largely subacromial. When the arm is behind the back the subdeltoid bursa becomes largely subcoracoid as the humerus is rotated internally. In external rotation the subcoracoid portion is nearly effaced as the movable periphery is stretched outward from beneath the coracoid process. Even in cases in which there may be a synovial fold between the subcoracoid and subdeltoid portions of the bursa, the two portions are essentially one. I have found this partition complete, although not infrequently I find a nictitating fold of the finest synovial membrane which forms only a partial partition between the two. These nictitating folds are always found in the subacromial bursa, not only in this situation, but in other parts. They are really parts of the movable periphery. They fold on themselves when not stretched by some extreme motion, and because they are almost as thin as cobwebs, the double layer has little thickness and is quite transparent. Even when double, they are thinner than the normal peritoneum. After trauma or operation in this region, these film-like partitions in various parts of the bursa may become adherent and cause it to be split up into a number of small sacs. Even when the subdeltoid portion of the bursa has been removed, a new subdivided sac takes its place.
The reader should thoroughly Understand that there is a difference between the subcoracoid portion of the subacromial bursa (Bursa M. coracobrachial) and the bursa connecting with the joint spoken of on page 20 which lies under the subscapularis, between it and the edge of the glenoid (Bursa M. subscapularis). This extension of the joint has nothing to do with the subcoracoid bursa about which we are speaking, which lies anterior to the subscapularis (Fig. 17). The subcoracoid bursa or, as I prefer to say, the subcoracoid portion of the subacromial bursa, lies between the subscapularis muscle, the coracoid process and the combined origins of the tendons of the short head of the biceps and coracobrachialis, which arise from the coracoid process. It is therefore separated by the whole thickness of the subscapularis muscle from the extension of the joint beneath it. However, bursas, even more than muscles or tendons, vary in form in different individuals. For instance, since both bursas approach each other on the superior surface of the subscapularis, we sometimes find them united over it, so that a horseshoe shaped arch is formed beneath the coracoid process and the tendons arising from it. Under this arch the subscapularis may run with much freedom. I think such communications are not uncommon, particularly where the bursas have become dilated from the presence of fluid.
Since the movement of the subscapularis muscle is at right angles with the tendons of the coracobrachialis, etc., it is quite necessary for nature to supply a bursa in this region. The arc of motion of any point on the lesser tuberosity is somewhere about an inch and a half between the position of internal rotation and the position of external rotation, and this would be a long stretch for simple areolar tissue. When I first wrote about these bursas, I did not fully realize that the subcoracoid and subacromial bursa usually communicated, and the old figures were inaccurate for that reason.   (Fig. 33.)
Other bursas about the shoulder have been claimed. Piersol says:—

"An infraserratus bursa has been described (Terrilon) situated between the inferior scapula angle and the chest wall. Its enlargement gives rise to friction-like crepitation or creaking, which has been mistaken for fracture of ribs or scapula, or for an arthritis of the shoulder." He also quotes Nancrede as discussing these symptoms. Goldthwait has also written on a subscapular bursa which he claims may give similar symptoms. This bursa is said to be between the upper and anterior portion of the blade and the back of the first three ribs.  It also would necessarily be "infraserratus."
We must agree that in some people, there are peculiar cracklings when the shoulder blades are moved, and that pain sometimes occurs with the cracklings. Goldthwait is inclined to attribute these peculiar cases, in which there is a painful crepitation or creaking, to this subscapular bursa, and it is quite possible that Terrilon and Nancrede and others have attributed the same symptoms to the above-mentioned infraserratus bursa at the lower angle. I have sometimes thought that such noises were due to unusual friction in the small inconstant subtrapezoid bursa which lies over the triangular surface at the base of the spine of the scapula under the trapezius.   This particular bursa is very apt to become sore in cases where there are scapulo-humeral adhesions and the shoulder blade is obliged to do double work. I am apt to attribute such symptoms to this subtrape-zoid bursa and am not prepared to take a positive stand as to the existence of either the infraserratus bursa at the lower angle of the scapula, nor of the subscapular bursa at the upper angle of the scapula. I recognize cases which have painful crepitation in these regions, but practically I do not see cases with severe enough symptoms to make me feel like operating on these patients. Goldthwait's article is worth reading, and he has undoubtedly cured patients with these symptoms by removing the upper portion of the scapula. It seems to me that this is a rather radical operation for a doubtful condition, but the operation is not dangerous and the symptoms sometimes very severe. One should consider the question carefully. The shoulder is prone to reverberate crackling noises which oftentimes are perfectly painless. I can move my own scapula so as to make it sound about the room without the slightest pain, and yet I cannot even locate the exact spot where the primary vibration takes place. Creaking shoulders are as common as creaking knees and are usually painless. One must be on one's guard not to attribute symptoms to conditions which cause creaking noises, for the symptoms may be due to something which accompanies rather than causes the creaking.

FIGURE 18. NORMAL BURSAE ABOUT SHOULDER

Small bursas arc described beneath some of the tendons near their attachments to the humerus on the ridges on each side of the bicipital groove. These bursas probably exist to permit the bone to turn away from the dense tendons when the latter exert their power to rotate the bone on its long axis. The teres major, latissimus dorsi and pectoralis major are said to have such bursae. I have never seen lesions in any of them, although sometimes I have found local tenderness over their locations in living patients. Such cases have usually promptly recovered; I have never known of any chronic condition in one of these bursas.
I have also seen a case where there was a very distinct bursa superior to the coracoid process, between it and an anomalous insertion of the pectoralis minor to the outer side of the process. This anomaly, if found to be a frequent condition, might explain a few cases which are now clinically obscure.
The synovial lining of the bicipital canal has sometimes been described as a bursa. To my mind it is more properly called a sheath, but it is in fact merely an extension of the joint cavity with which it freely communicates.
An anatomic point which is readily forgotten in thinking of the shoulder is that the upward motion called hunching is performed by the upper part of the trapezius muscle, and this muscle is supplied by the spinal accessory. Not long ago, a patient was sent to me for shoulder symptoms which had not been attributed to a recent operation on the neck!
An interesting, if not important point, is that the platysma extends down into the skin over the shoulder, and Gray says that it actually has an attachment to the edge of the acromion. In cases where the trapezius has been paralyzed for a long time, one may see the shoulder feebly lifted by the platysma.
It does not seem to me necessary in this book to review the situations of the arteries and veins. Surgeons have come to think lightly of arteries because it is so easy to tie them and find no apparent immediate sign of harm following the ligation. As a rule one can safely rely on the anastomoses to supply the region with sufficient blood. Personally I try to save arteries and even large veins when I can. In plastic operations about the shoulder joint, it is doubly necessary, for if one ties too freely, one may tie not only the main artery of the part, but its collaterals, and healing may be delayed.
The nerves which supply the muscles about the shoulder will be taken up with the discussion of the various forms of paralysis, but the reader should at least know well the upper portion of the brachial plexus.
There are three free bony surfaces in the shoulder which one should bear in mind, for they are of practical importance beyond the slight attention called to them in anatomic text books. One of these is on the back of the upper end of the humerus, in the region of the surgical neck, internal to the origin of the external head of the triceps. This bare portion of course is not, strictly speaking, bare, for it is covered with periosteum and areolar tissue, but it has no muscular origin or insertion on it, and is opposite the glenoid head of the triceps. The other two similar surfaces are on the inner and outer side of the neck of the glenoid on the body of the scapula. The anterior is beneath the subscapulars and the posterior beneath the infraspinatus. These surfaces should be borne in mind when one is visualizing fractures or dislocations of this neighborhood. The extensions of the joints (B. M. subscapularis and M. infraspinati) under these muscles lie in the spaces over these smooth areas.
The following chapter discusses the normal motions which the structures spoken of in this chapter may perform in relation to one another. The reader should endeavor to visualize the parts taken by the supraspinatus and by the subacromial bursa as he follows the text.

REFERENCES

Comparative Anatomy

FLOWER, WM. H., An Introduction to the Osteology of the Mammalia, third edition, 1885.
PARKER, W. K., The Structure and Development of the Shoulder Girdle and Sternum, Ray Society, 1868.

1 have found no mention of the subacromial bursa in any anatomic description of lower animals, although such bursas certainly must exist in the primates and possibly in beavers.

Human, Anatomy. I know of no good descriptions of the anatomy of the supraspinatus tendon or of the subacromial bursa, but I have not had access to the following articles to which reference is made in the literature. Possibly these, although written long ago, describe these structures adequately.
JARJAVAY, J. F., Die Anatomie und Pathologie der Schleimbeutel und Sehnen-scheiden, Erlangen, 1863.
GRUBER, W., Die Oberschulterhakenschleimbeutel (Bursse mucosae, supra-coracoidese). Eine Monographic mit Vorbemerkungen enthaltend: Beitrage zur Anatomie der Regio infraclavicularis und deltoidea, 4°, St. Petersburg, 1861, Repr. from: Med. Acad. imp. d. sc. de St. Petersburg, 7, x, iii, no. 11.

Superficial descriptions of the bursa are given in a few text books and in some of the many articles referred to in the bibliography of Chapter VI, but it does not seem necessary to go into detail in regard to the points in which they differ from mine. I feel quite confident that the reader will find the structures which I have described in this chapter, if he will carefully study the best book there is on the subject of anatomy — the human body — but he must be painstaking in following the instructions. More detail in regard to the microscopic anatomy of the insertion of the tendon will be found on pages 97 to 107.

 


 

 

 


 

 

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