Retrospective Study
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2017.
World J Radiol. Mar 28, 2017; 9(3): 126-133
Published online Mar 28, 2017. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v9.i3.126
Table 1 Snyder’s classification of rotator cuff tears
Location
AArticular side
BBursal side
CFull-thickness tears, connecting A and B sides
Severity of partial tears (A and B side)
0Normal cuff, with smooth coverings of synovium and bursa
1Minimal, superficial bursal or synovial irritation or slight capsular fraying in a small, localized area; usually < 1 cm
2Actually fraying and failure of some rotator cuff fibres in addition to synovial, bursal, or capsular injury; usually < 2 cm
3More severe rotator cuff injury, including fraying and fragmentation of tendons fibers, often involving the whole surface of a cuff tendon; usually < 3 cm
4Very severe partial rotator cuff tear that usually contains, in addition to fraying and fragmentation of tendon tissue, a sizable flap tear and often encompasses more than a single tendon
Severity of complete tears (C)
1Small, complete tear, such as a puncture wound
2Moderate tear, (usually < 2 cm) that still encompasses only one of the rotator cuff tendons with no retraction of the torn ends
3Large, complete tear involving an entire tendon with minimal retraction of the torn edge; usually 3 to 4 cm
4Massive rotator cuff tear involving two or more rotator cuff tendons, frequently with associated retraction and scarring of the remaining tendon
Table 2 Adaptation to magnetic resonance arthrography of arthroscopic Snyder’s classification of rotator cuff partial tears
Lesion's gradeSeverity of partial tears (A or B lesion)
1Subtle irregularities of the tendon surface with preserved thickness
2Major irregularities of the tendon surface with preserved thickness
3Lesions involve less than 50% of tendon diameter and lesion extension is less than 3 cm
4Lesions involve more than 50% of tendon's diameter with an extension of more than 3 cm or the lesion involves two tendons
Table 3 Distribution of lesion severity degree on articular and bursal sides of 55 patients with a partial rotator cuff tear at the arthroscopic assessment
Articular side tear
A0A1A2A3A4
Bursal side tearB0-1121
B138000
B245531
B300152
B4000112
Table 4 Data regarding the 5 patients with a complete tear at the reference standard assigned with a partial score at the magnetic resonance arthrography by the most experienced reader (reader 1)
Reader 1Reference standard
Articular sideBursal sideComplete tear
A 2B 1C 1
A 3B 4C 1
A 2B 3C 1
A 4B 4C 1
A 4B 4C 1
Table 5 Data on agreement of the severity degree assigned on the articular side for partial tear between magnetic resonance arthrography (according to the most experienced reader) and arthroscopy
Reader 1
A0A1A2A3A4
ArthroscopyA070000
A186000
A222300
A300470
A400088
Table 6 Data on agreement of the severity degree assigned on the bursal side for partial lesions between magnetic resonance arthrography and arthroscopic assessment
Reader 1
B0B1B2B3B4
ArthroscopyB050000
B174000
B247700
B300350
B4000310