Can you tell what this means in English? FINDINGS: Mild tendinopathy is seen at the far anterior insertion of the supraspinatus. The infraspinatus, subscapularis and teres minor tendons are intact. No partial thickness or full-thickness rotator cuff tear is identified. No significant amount of fluid is seen in the subacromial/subdeltoid bursa. The long head of the biceps is properly located within the bicipital groove. It appears intact and seen to the level of the anchor. MRI There is linear signal in the superior labrum near the posterior aspect of the biceps-labral anchor on series 5, image 11. Question if this could represent a normal variant sub-labral recess. No paralabral cyst is seen. There is thickening and mild periligamentous edema around the axillary pouch/inferior glenohumeral ligament. Mild edema is seen in the rotator interval/retro-coracoid fat. The humerus is properly located within the glenoid. A small glenohumeral joint effusion is identified. Moderate degenerative changes affect the acromioclavicular joint. A type I acromion is visualized. Heterogeneous signal is seen within the marrow which may reflect red marrow reconversion, nonspecific. The scapular notches and quadrilateral space are unremarkable. No definite axillary lymphadenopathy is seen. IMPRESSION: 1. Thickening and periligamentous edema of the axillary pouch/inferior glenohumeral ligament and edema in the rotator interval/subcoracoid fat, nonspecific. In the right clinical setting, these findings can be seen in patients with adhesive capsulitis. 2. Mild supraspinatus tendinopathy without discrete tear. 3. Suspected normal variant sub-labral recess in the superior labrum. No definite labral tear on this non-arthrographic study.