Aims. The aim of this study was to investigate the outcomes of arthroscopic decompression of
In a prospective randomised trial of
Aims. We conducted a study to identify factors that are prognostic
of the outcome of extracorporeal shockwave therapy (ESWT) for calcific
tendinitis of the shoulder. Patients and Methods. Since 1998, patients with symptomatic
We report a prospective study of the effects of extracorporeal shock-wave therapy in 195 patients with chronic
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Manipulation under anaesthetic (MUA) is an established treatment for frozen shoulder. Frozen shoulder may coexist with other shoulder conditions, whose treatment may differ from MUA. One such condition is calcific tendonitis. Only one study to date documents treatment of patients with frozen shoulder and concurrent
The purpose of this study was to investigate the association of endocrine disease with
There is debate regarding the most appropriate treatment of
Calcific tendinitis of the shoulder is a common cause of shoulder pain and is usually treated conservatively initially. We evaluated the ultrasound-guided needling procedure for calcium deposits in the rotator cuff. Between 2002 and 2003 eight men and 18 women (mean age 49 years) with
The aim of the study was to evaluate changes in clinical results after extracorporeal shock wave therapy (ESWT) on calcified lesions of the shoulder. 963 patients with
Aim To evaluate the functional results of rotator cuff function and integrity after arthroscopic excision of calcium and decompression with a minimum follow up of two years. Methods Between 2002 and 2004, sixty consecutive patients with
A 59-year-old woman with
Aims: The roentgenologic morphology of symptomatic calcified deposits of the rotator cuff can be classified according Gärtner (1993, Z Orthop Ihre Grenzgebiete 131: 461–469). This classification influences therapeutic procedures and prognosis of clinical outcome in these patients. In the present study intraoberserver-reproducibility and interobserver-reliability of Gärtner’s classification were tested. Methods: Plane radiographs of 100 patients with calcifications of the supraspinatus tendon were classified according the criteria of Gärtner by six independent observers twice within four months. Intrao-berserver-reproducibility and interobserver-reliability were calculated by means of Cohen’s-kappa-index. Results: Kappa-values of intraoberserver-reproducibility had a mean of 0.4208 (SD 0.1299), kappavalues of interobserver-reliability were 0.490 for the first and 0.474 for the second classification. Conclusions: Determination of intraoberserverreproducibility gave insufficient to satisfactory results, interobserver-reliability was sufficient. The clinical use of Gärtner’s classification to plan therapeutic procedures or to determine clinical prognosis in patients with
The purpose of this study was to assess the clinical outcome of two non-invasive techniques used in the treatment of
Purpose: We present the results of subacromial decompression and repair of the rotator cuff through a minimal deltoid-on approach. Material and Method: Eighty-seven patients with longstanding shoulder pain were evaluated in two years (1999–2000) in our department. In sixty -eight of them symptoms were due to impigment syndrome. Eight patients with follow up time less than six months were excluded from this study, twenty were treated conservatively and the remaining forty (22 female, 18 male, mean age 50.3) underwent surgery. Three x-ray views were obtained in all patients, i.e. standard AP, true AP, and subacromial space projection. MRI was also obtained in all patients. MRI revealed
Ultrasound (US)-guided injections are widely used in patients with conditions of the shoulder in order to improve their accuracy. However, the clinical efficacy of US-guided injections compared with blind injections remains controversial. The aim of this study was to compare the accuracy and efficacy of US-guided compared with blind corticosteroid injections into the glenohumeral joint in patients with primary frozen shoulder (FS). Intra-articular corticosteroid injections were administered to 90 patients primary FS, who were randomly assigned to either an US-guided (n = 45) or a blind technique (n = 45), by a shoulder specialist. Immediately after injection, fluoroscopic images were obtained to assess the accuracy of the injection. The outcome was assessed using a visual analogue scale (VAS) for pain, the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) score, the subjective shoulder value (SSV) and range of movement (ROM) for all patients at the time of presentation and at three, six, and 12 weeks after injection.Aims
Methods
The aim of this study was to determine the effect
of radial extracorporeal shock-wave therapy (rESWT) on patients with
chronic tendinitis of the rotator cuff. This was a randomised controlled
trial in which 82 patients (mean age 47 years (24 to 67)) with chronic
tendinitis diagnosed clinically were randomly allocated to a treatment
group who received low-dose rESWT (three sessions at an interval
10 to 14 days, 2000 pulses, 0.11 mJ/mm2, 8 Hz) or to
a placebo group, with a follow-up of six months. The patients and
the treating orthopaedic surgeon, who were both blinded to the treatment,
evaluated the results. A total of 44 patients were allocated to
the rESWT group and 38 patients to the placebo group. A visual analogue
scale (VAS) score for pain, a Constant–Murley (CMS) score and a simple
shoulder test (SST) score significantly improved in both groups
at three and six months compared with baseline (all p ≤ 0.012).
The mean VAS was similar in both groups at three (p = 0.43) and
six months (p = 0.262). Also, the mean CMS and SST scores were similar
in both groups at six months (p = 0.815 and p = 0.834, respectively). It would thus seem that low-dose rESWT does not reduce pain or
improve function in patients chronic rotator cuff tendinitis compared
with placebo treatment. Cite this article: