Skip to main content
Fig. 5 | The Egyptian Journal of Neurology, Psychiatry and Neurosurgery

Fig. 5

From: Clinical and radiological assessment of hemiplegic shoulder pain in stroke patients

Fig. 5

shows right shoulder MRI of 45 years old male patient with adhesive capsulitis; A Axial fat-suppressed proton image, B Coronal oblique fat-suppressed proton image and C Sagittal oblique T2 images show thickened inferior gleno-humeral ligament (white arrow in A), bicipital tendinitis and effusion (black arrow in A), increase thickness of axillary pouch capsule (curved white arrows in B), thickened coraco-humeral ligament (white arrow in C) and obliteration of sub-coracoid fat triangle (asterisk in C). MRI images also show supraspinatus tendinitis (thick white arrow in B), Hill sachs lesion (thin white arrow in B), subacromial bursitis (black arrow in B) and gleno-humeral joint effusion (asterisks in A and B). D Axial US image of right shoulder of the another patient with adhesive capsulitis shows rotator cuff interval containing long head of biceps (LHB), thickened coraco-humeral ligament (asterisk) and thickened superior gleno-humeral ligament (curved white arrow)

Back to article page