Frozen Shoulder is a common condition which causes significant morbidity in people of working age. The 2 most popular forms of surgical treatment for this condition are Manipulation under Anaesthesia (MUA) or MUA plus Arthroscopic Capsular Release (ACR). Both treatment modalities are known to give good results, but no-one has compared the two to see which is better. To compare the outcome in patients with primary frozen shoulder, who are treated by either MUA or MUA plus ACR.Background
Aim
The aim of this study was to review the results of surgery on patients who had recurrent instabilty of the shoulder associated with significant bone loss who were treated by autogenous iliac crest tricortical grafts. Ten consecutive patients were reviewed. All had significant loss of glenoid bone stock as assessed by CT scan. All were treated by use of tricortical bone graft harvested from the iliac crest and fashioned to reconstitute the anterior glenoid defect. This was fixed intra-articularly with cannulated screws. The antero-inferior capsule was then repaired to this new “glenoid rim”. All patients had a standard rehabilitation regime. All patients had an assessment of the Oxford Shoulder Instability Score (OIS) and the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons Score (ASES) before and after the operation. At an average follow-up of 26 months, the mean OIS had improved from 38.3 to 22.3 and the mean ASES had increased from 40.5 to 86.6. None had had a recurrent dislocation. The use of autogenous iliac crest bone graft to treat recurrent shoulder instability associated with significant glenoid bone loss is an effective treatment for this difficult condition.
Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair has evolved significantly in the last decade and has become a standard treatment. Satisfactory results of arthroscopic subacromial decompression (ASD) in the treatment of rotator cuff tears have also been reported (
Outcome was not related to the direction of instability, type of radiofrequency probe, age or ligamentous laxity. Two patients had a transient reduction in sensation in the axillary nerve distribution. 22 of 38 (57.9%) patients returned to their pre-instability level of sporting activity.
The aim of this study was to assess the outcome of subacromial decompression alone for small and medium size rotator cuff tears. Between January 1996 and Mach 1999, one hundred and fourteen patients had a subacromial decompression for small and medium cuff tears. They were sixty men (63 shoulders) and fifty women (51 shoulders) with a mean age of 61 years (range, 37 to 87 years). The mean duration of symptoms was 25 months (range, 3 to 225 months). There were 31 manual workers, 28 sedentary workers 55 were retired. There were 26 small and 88 medium size tears. The mean follow-up was 40 months (range, 24 to 62 months). Patients were assessed using the constant score and a patient satisfaction scale. The mean (SD) Constant score was 70 (+/−16.8). The procedure was considered a failure, if the patient had subsequent surgery or was dissatisfied with the result. There were 29 (25.4%) unsatisfactory results. Twenty-five patients (21.9%) had revision surgery. An unsatisfactory outcome was related to manual work (p<
0.001) and symptoms of more than 12 months (p<
0.05). Results were unsatisfactory in 40.4% of patients under the age of 60 years and 12.9% over the age of 60 years (p<
0.001). Unsatisfactory results were not related to arm dominance, sex, history of trauma, tear size, biceps pathology or presence of acromio-clavicular osteophytes (p>
0.5 for all). The mean duration between subacromial decompression and subsequent surgery in 25 patients was 13 months (range: three to 35 months). At revision surgery, three (42.8%) of seven small tears had progressed to medium size tears and three (16.6%) of eighteen medium tears had progressed to large size tears. Subacromial decompression for small and medium sized tears has an unsatisfactory outcome in patients under the age of sixty years and manual workers but may be a suitable alternative to cuff repair in patients above the age of sixty years. Some small and medium sized cuff tears progress in spite of adequate subacromial decompression.
The aim of this study was to assess the medium-term results of the Copeland cementless surface replacement of the shoulder for rheumatoid arthritis. Between 1986 and 1998, 75 patients with rheumatoid arthritis had a cementless surface replacement. They were 58 females and 17 males with a mean age 60 years (range: 24 to 88 years). The mean follow-up was 6 years (range: 2 to 14 years). The functional outcome was assessed using the Constant score and a patient satisfaction scale. The mean Constant score was 53.4 points for total shoulder replacements (76 age/ sex adjusted) and 47.9 points for hemiarthroplasty (71 age/ sex adjusted). Forward elevation improved from 50 degrees to 104 degrees for total shoulder replacements and from 47 degrees to 101 degrees for hemiarthroplasty. Seventytwo patients (96%) considered the shoulder to be better or much better. 3 patients (4%) felt the shoulder was the same. The deltopectoral approach was used in 38 while the antero-superior (Mackenzie) approach was used in 37 shoulders. The rotator cuff was intact in 24 shoulders, thin but intact in 21 shoulders, had a full thickness tear in 26 shoulders and a massive tear in four shoulders. Sixty-eight patients were available for radiological review. Fifty-six (82.4%) humeral components showed no lucent lines. Eleven (16.2%) showed localised lucent lines <
1mm and one was loose. Of the 39 glenoid components, 19 (48.7%) showed no lucent lines, 19 (48.7%) showed lucent lines <
1mm and one was loose. No lucencies were observed in the hydroxyapatite coated implants. Two patients in the total shoulder group with massive cuff tears required revision for component loosening. One patient in the hemiarthroplasty group was revised to a total due to pain, with complete pain relief. The results of CSRA are at least comparable to stemmed prosthesis in rheumatoid arthritis. However, CSRA preserves bone stock and allows easier revision in this relatively young group of patients. It also reduces the risk of humeral shaft fractures compared to a stemmed implant, especially when an elbow replacement is needed.
The purpose of this study was to report the results of the vertical apical suture Bankart lesion repair. Fifty-nine patients (52 men and seven women) with a mean age of twenty-seven years (range, 16–53 years) underwent this procedure. The mean duration of instability was 4 years and mean follow-up was 42 months (minimum of two years). A laterally based T-shape capsular incision is performed with the horizontal component directed towards the glenoid neck and into the Bankart lesion. A vertical apical suture through the superior and inferior flaps of the Bankart lesion, tighten the anterior structures to allow them to snug onto the convex decorticated surface of the anterior glenoid. At final review, according to the system of Rowe et al., 94.9% (56 patients) had a rating of good or excellent. Three patients had a recurrent dislocation due to further trauma. The mean loss of forward elevation was 1 degree, external rotation with the arm at the side was 2.4 degrees and external rotation in 90 degrees abduction was 2.2 degrees. Of forty-four patients participating in sport, thirty-five (79.5%) returned to the same sport at the same level of activity, even returned to the same sport at a reduced level of activity and two patients did not return to sport. The vertical apical suture repair offers a 94.9 percent success rate in terms of stability, a maintained range of motion and a 79.5% return to pre-injury level of sporting activity. It is technically less demanding than the Bankart procedure. All sutures used are absorbable. Complications related to non-absorbable implants and absorbable anchors and tacks are avoided.