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Sprengel's deformity
Classification and external resources
ICD-10 Q74.0
ICD-9 755.52
OMIM 184400
DiseasesDB 31521
eMedicine orthoped/445

Sprengel's deformity (also known as High scapula or Congenital high scapula) is a rare congenital skeletal abnormality where a person has one shoulder blade that sits higher on the back than the other. The deformity is due to a failure in early fetal development where the shoulder fails to descend properly from the neck to its final position. The deformity is commonly associated with other conditions, most notably Klippel-Feil syndrome, congenital scoliosis including cervical scoliosis, fused ribs, the presence of an omovertebral bone and spina bifida. The left shoulder is the most commonly affected shoulder but the condition can be bilateral, meaning that both shoulders are affected. About 75% of all observed cases are girls. Treatment includes surgery in early childhood and physical therapy. Surgical treatment in adulthood is complicated by the risk of nerve damage when removing the omovertebral bone and when stretching the muscle tissue during relocation of the shoulder.

Presentation [edit]

The scapula is small and rotated so that its inferior edge points toward the spine. There is a high correlation between Sprengel's deformity and the Klippel-Feil syndrome. Sometimes a bony connection is present between the elevated scapula and one of the cervical vertebrae, usually C5 or C6. This connection is known as the omovertebral bone.

Eponym [edit]

It is named for Otto Sprengel.[1][2]

References [edit]

  1. ^ synd/2450 at Who Named It?
  2. ^ O. K. Sprengel. Die angeborene Verschiebung des Schulterblattes nach oben. Archiv für klinische Chirurgie, Berlin, 1891, 42: 545-549.

Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sprengel's_deformity — Please support Wikipedia.
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5 videos found

Amazing Kids: Sam

Sam's difficulties with scoliosis and Sprengel deformity, a cogenital disorder in which one shoulder is displaced upward, were allayed by surgery at American...

Sprengel Museum

sprengel's sports bar sprengel sprengelmeyer sprengel's deformity sprengel anomaly.

CROSSBOW HUNTING: "OCTOBER WHITETAILS"

2010 NEW JERSEY FALL BOW SEASON "OCTOBER" DOE AND BUCK HARVEST FOOTAGE. MUSIC: STEVE EARLE'S "COPPERHEAD ROAD"

Physical Therapy

Josh with new leg braces, but walking with the knees locked.

Roye Several-Minute Clip

A few very short sections of an interview with orthopedist Dr. David P. Roye Jr., MD. Conversation with Nico Phillips; filmed by Yasuaki 'Yas' Nakajima. 28Ma...

 
5 videos found

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