Publications by authors named "Yuhei Hatori"

Background: Left-handed baseball pitchers exhibit unique throwing biomechanics, yet the risk factors for shoulder and elbow injuries in this population remain unclear.

Purpose: To prospectively investigate preseason risk factors for shoulder and elbow injuries in left-handed high school baseball pitchers.

Study Design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2.

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Background: Differences in shoulder range of motion (ROM), shoulder muscle strength, and humeral torsion between left- and right-handed high school baseball pitchers remain poorly characterized.

Hypothesis: Similar differences in shoulder ROM, strength, and humeral torsion between right-handed pitchers (RHPs) and left-handed pitchers (LHPs) observed in professionals will also be present in high school pitchers, with potential variations due to developmental stages.

Study Design: Cross-sectional study; Level of evidence, 3.

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Introduction Ulnar nerve instability (UNI) is a common cause of ulnar neuropathy. The relationship between UNI and medial elbow instability has not yet been investigated in baseball pitchers. We investigated the association between UNI and the degree of ulnar collateral ligamentous laxity in high school baseball pitchers.

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: The repetitive overhead throwing of baseball stresses the posterior shoulder, including the rotator cuff and capsule, causing stiffness, tissue thickening, and dysfunction. Previous studies on collegiate baseball players have linked these changes to glenohumeral internal rotation deficits, pain, and injuries. However, these studies primarily used acoustic radiation force impulse-based shear wave elastography (SWE), which has limitations, including tissue heating and lack of portability.

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Background: The Functional Movement Screen (FMS) is used to evaluate fundamental movement patterns in patients. It is unknown whether the FMS can be used as a predictive tool for the occurrence of pitching injuries in baseball players.

Purpose: To prospectively investigate the relationship between shoulder and elbow injuries and individual components of the FMS during the preseason in high school baseball pitchers and determine which components of the FMS can be used as screening tools to predict shoulder and elbow injuries.

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BACKGROUND Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is a disease in which the immune response elicited by heparin results in a state of hypercoagulability and platelet activation, leading to thrombocytopenia and thromboembolism. Gustilo-Anderson type IIIC open fractures of the extremities are defined as open fractures presenting with arterial injuries that require repair and result in treatment challenges and complications. The diagnosis of HIT can be difficult in patients with severe trauma with consumptive thrombocytopenia associated with heavy bleeding and the use of heparin after vascular anastomosis.

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Article Synopsis
  • Hospital healthcare workers have a high prevalence of musculoskeletal disorders, but little is known about lateral epicondylitis (LE) specifically among them.
  • A study involving 544 participants from a secondary emergency hospital diagnosed LE in about 5.5% of health workers using specific criteria including elbow pain and physical examinations.
  • Key factors like age, occupation, and usage of personal devices were evaluated through questionnaires to understand their association with LE, but results indicated no significant differences in prevalence among staff.
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Total elbow arthroplasty is effective for pain relief and the functional improvement of severe symptomatic hemophilic osteoproliferative arthropathy. Nevertheless, high complication rates have been reported. This report describes clinical results obtained at 30-month follow-up of total elbow arthroplasty in a hemophilic patient with severe flexion contracture.

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An association between glomus tumor and neurofibromatosis type 1 has been reported. It is characterized by multiple tumors and young age at onset. The early diagnosis of neurofibromatosis type 1 is important because it is associated with a high rate of malignancy.

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Carpal joint osteoarthritis and the formation of bony irregularities of the carpal bone cause closed flexor tendon ruptures. This report describes a case of a flexor profundus tendon closed rupture of the little finger due to asymptomatic pisotriquetral osteoarthritis in a 73-year-old woman, which required differentiation from tendon rupture due to hamate bony irregularity due to bone erosion. Computed tomography showed cortical bone irregularities of the hamate and the narrowing of the pisotriquetral joint space, and a bony spur on the radial side of the pisiform.

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Flexor tenosynovitis is rare in young children. This case report describes that of a 10-year-old boy with diffuse swelling of the left index finger, pain when catching a ball, and progressive inability for full flexing of the finger 2 months after starting baseball play. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a defined lesion with iso-signal intensity to muscle on T1-weighted imaging, and with high signal intensity to muscle on T2-weighted imaging.

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Article Synopsis
  • Osteochondritis dissecans (OCD) commonly affects young athletes, especially those engaging in repetitive overhead sports like baseball, with conservative treatment showing promise for spontaneous healing if the growth plates are still open.
  • A case study of a 12-year-old male baseball player revealed OCD of the humeral capitellum, and after a diagnosis via ultrasonography, he was advised to avoid heavy elbow use and began conservative treatment.
  • After 12 months of physiotherapy focusing on flexibility and core strength, the OCD lesion healed completely, suggesting conservative measures may be effective even with closed epiphyseal lines.
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Madelung deformity is a congenital disorder with the malformation of anterior ulnar bowing of radius and a dorsally protruding ulnar head caused by premature growth disturbance at the medial volar aspect of the distal radius. This report describes a bilateral idiopathic Madelung deformity in a 17-year-old woman treated successfully using reverse wedge osteotomy of the distal radius in a symptomatic left wrist. Reverse wedge osteotomy can orient the radial joint surface while correcting the whole radius length by reversely putting the wedge bone removed from the distal metaphysis of radius, the base of which is cut from the surplus of the radial and dorsal cortical bone in the hypotrophic portion.

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Cubital tunnel syndrome, the second-most common peripheral compression neuropathy, is associated with dynamic pressure in the cubital tunnel with the elbow flexion position. Medial elbow ganglion originated from the ulnohumeral joint causing cubital tunnel syndrome has been reported. This report describes the case of a 48-year-old man who developed numbness in his left ring and little finger after prolonged motorbike touring.

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