MRI Arthogram

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yes. x-rays show bones, MRI soft tissue very well.

Although the diagnosis of instability is made many times on history and physical exam alone, MRI/arthrogram can show a labral tear or other pathology that could be lending the shoulder to instability. However if you just have a sloppy capsule that is causing the instability, many times the MRI/arthrogram may appear normal, or have a large amount of redundancy of the inferior capsule seen sometimes on the MRI/arthrogram.
 
If MRI/arthogram shows tear or some sort of pathology associated with soft tissue damage, how likely is surgery?
 
Labral tear causing occasional "feeling" of instability, though upon examination, there is no shoulder instability. Does this person need surgery?

Unfortunately I don't think it's quite that simple. Depends on the type and degree of the tear seen, the symptoms the patient describes, the degree of interference with his/her life, willingness to have surgery, and specific physical exam findings to ensure that the MRI results correlate with the clinical findings. So hard to answer a question like that over the internet, even for the experienced attendings. That's why medical advice isn't given here (of course, I'm assuming you're asking a hypothetical question).
 
Yes, this is hypothetical. MRI/arthogram indicates labral tear spanning posterior labrum from superior to inferior, so I'm pretty sure it's not a SLAP but something similar.
 
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