Abstract
Purpose of the study: Little work has been done to assess outcome of rotator cuff tear repair in young adults aged less than 40 years. The purpose of our study was to assess the clinical and anatomic outcomes in a continuous series of arthroscopic rotator cuff repairs performed in patients aged less than 40 years.
Material and method: This was a retrospective analysis (2004–2007) of 15 young patients (age 18–39 years, mean 32.7 years) with rotator cuff tears confirmed on the arthroscan. All tears were repaired arthroscopically using the same reinsertion technique with anchors. Patients underwent bilateral assessment (SSV, Constant) at at least 12 months follow-up. A control imaging with injection (arthroscan or arthroMRI) was available in 12 of 15 patients.
Results: The series included 7 female and 8 male patients, 13 right and 2 left shoulders; 14 of 15 shoulders were on the dominant side. The time from symptom onset to surgery was 26 months on average. Patients were reviewed at mean 31 months follow-up. Preoperative range of motion was preserved in all patients. The mean preoperative Constant score was 55.5 on the operated side and 91.4 on the other side. The preoperative arthroscan demonstrated partial deep tears of the supraspinatus or infraspinatus in 5 patients with a posterosuperior impingement. The ten other shoulders exhibited full thickness tears of the supraspinatus. At last follow-up, the mean Constant score was 77.2 (range 44–90) with significant improvement of all partial scores except force. Patients resumed their former occupational activities at mean 8 months (range 1–36); resumption of sports activities occurred during the 7th month. Subjective satisfaction rate was 81.7%. Postoperative imaging with injection showed a healed cuff in 83% of the shoulders reviewed (10/12).
Discussion: Rotator cuff tears are exceptional in young subjects aged less than 40 years; there is considerable potential for worsening. Outcome after rotator cuff repair is very age dependent. It is important to diagnose these tears early to enable early repair; the anatomic results are good and persistent in younger patients.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ghislaine Patte at sofcot@sofcot.fr