
Correction
Select search scope: search across all journals or within the current journal





Throughout the history of reverse total shoulder arthroplasty, the extent of lateral offset has changed considerably from “too lateral” to “too medial” and has been lately swinging back towards a point somewhere in between. Nonlateralized designs minimize shear forces on the glenoid and decrease force required by the deltoid. Glenoid lateralization decreases impingement and scapular notching and improves range of motion. Humeral lateralization achieves a more anatomic position of the tuberosities while maintaining a nonlateralized center of rotation. Several factors play a role in choosing the extent of lateral offset and method of lateralization.
Anatomic parameters, such as the critical shoulder angle and acromion index, have emerged as methods to quantify scapular anatomy and may contribute to rotator cuff pathology. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the published literature on influences of scapular morphology on the development of re-tears and patient-reported outcomes following rotator cuff repair.
A systematic review of the Embase and PubMed databases was performed to identify published studies on the potential influence of scapular bony morphology and re-tear rates and patient-reported outcomes after rotator cuff repair. Studies were reviewed by two authors.
A total of 615 unique titles and 49 potentially relevant abstracts were reviewed, with eight published manuscripts identified for inclusion. Two of three papers reported no relationship between these acromion index and rotator cuff re-tear rate, while one paper found an increased re-tear rate. All three studies on critical shoulder angle found a significant association between critical shoulder angle and cuff re-tear rate. There was no clear relationship between any bony morphologic measurement and patient-reported outcomes after rotator cuff repair.
Rotator cuff re-tear rate appears to be significantly associated with the critical shoulder angle and glenoid inclination, while not clearly associated with acromial morphologic measurements.
The goals of this study were to determine the incidence in the United States of preoperative three-dimensional imaging prior to anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty for osteoarthritis and to determine if preoperative imaging is associated with decreased complication rates.
Using a Medicare insurance database, we identified all patients who underwent computed tomography (n = 9380) and/or magnetic resonance imaging (n = 15,653) prior to anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty for a diagnosis of osteoarthritis from 2005 to 2014. The incidence of imaging over time was analyzed and complication rates compared between patients with imaging to matched controls.
The incidence of preoperative three-dimensional imaging significantly increased over time, with computed tomography increasing more than magnetic resonance imaging. Compared to controls, patients with preoperative computed tomography imaging had significantly lower revision rates at two years (odds ratio 0.72 (0.64–0.82),
The use of preoperative three-dimensional imaging for anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty for a diagnosis of osteoarthritis has increased dramatically, with the use of computed tomography increasing the most. Patients who underwent preoperative computed tomography imaging experienced lower revision rates at two years postoperatively compared to matched controls without such imaging.
Level III, retrospective comparative study.
Acromial fractures are a substantial complication following reverse shoulder arthroplasty, reported to affect up to 7% of patients. Previous studies have shown that implant placement affects acromial stress during elevation of the arm in the scaption plane. The purpose of this study was to investigate the results of arm loading and variation in plane of elevation on acromial stresses.
Nine elevation angles (0°–120°), in three planes of elevation (abduction (0°), scaption (30°), and forward elevation (60°)), and three hand loads (0, 2.5, 5 kg) were investigated. Finite element models were generated using computed tomography data from 10 cadaveric shoulders (age 68 ± 19 yrs) to determine acromial stress distributions. Models were created for a lateralized glenosphere (0, 5, 10 mm), inferiorized glenosphere (0, 2.5, 5 mm), and humeral offset (−5, 0, 5 mm).
For all planes of elevation (0°, 30°, 60°) and hand loads (0, 2.5, 5 kg) investigated, glenoid lateralization consistently increased acromial stress, glenoid inferiorization consistently decreased acromial stress, and humeral offset proved to be insignificant in altering acromial stress. Abduction resulted in significantly higher peak acromial stresses (p = 0.002) as compared to scaption and forward elevation.
In addition to implant position and design, patient activity, such as plane of elevation and hand loads, has substantial effects on acromial stresses.
Basic science study
Sternoclavicular joint injections are one of the first-line treatment options for painful non-infectious pathologies of the sternoclavicular joint; however, their long-term effects and predictive value in decision-making for surgery are yet to be defined.
27/32 Patients who received in total 36 computed tomography-guided sternoclavicular joint injections in 2012–2017 replied the questionnaire with a mean follow-up of 38 months after the first sternoclavicular joint injection. Of those patients, seven underwent subsequent surgery. We evaluated pain response after sternoclavicular joint injection and American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons-score at later follow-up.
Directly after sternoclavicular joint injection, pain decreased from Visual Analog Scale 5.3 ± 2.4 to 3.8 ± 3 (p = 0.001). In the seven patients who underwent surgery for degenerative changes, definitive outcome correlated with pain relief after the last infiltration (r = 0.86, p = 0.012). Also, the final American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons-score was lower in patients with multiple injections compared to those who were satisfied after the first injection (p = 0.019).
Sternoclavicular injections are a useful tool in the context of degenerative sternoclavicular joint disorders as the amount of pain reduction is, in case the short-term effect is not long-lasting, at least a strong indicator for the future success of operative treatment.
The purpose of this study was to describe the clinical outcomes following bilateral total shoulder arthroplasty (TSA).
A systematic search of the PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library databases following PRISMA guidelines was performed. English-language literature published from 2010 to 2018 analyzing bilateral TSA (anatomic and/or reverse) with a minimum one-year follow-up was reviewed by two independent reviewers. Study quality was evaluated with the Modified Coleman Methodology Score and the methodological index for non-randomized studies score.
Eleven studies (1 Level II, 3 Level III, 7 Level IV) with 292 patients were included. Two studies reported on bilateral anatomic TSA (
The available data indicate that bilateral TSA allows for functional and pain improvements and result in high patient satisfaction.
IV.
Total shoulder arthroplasty with second generation porous tantalum glenoid implants (Trabecular Metal™) has shown good short-term outcomes, but mid-term outcomes are unknown. This study describes the clinical, radiographic, and patient-rated mid-term outcomes of total shoulder arthroplasty utilizing cemented Trabecular Metal™ glenoid components.
Patients who underwent anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty with cemented Trabecular Metal™ glenoid components for primary osteoarthritis were identified for minimum five-year follow-up. The primary outcome measure was implant survival; secondary outcome measures included patient-rated outcome scores, shoulder range of motion findings, and radiographic analysis.
Twenty-seven patients were enrolled in the study. Twenty-one patients had full radiographic follow-up. Mean follow-up was 6.6 years. There was 100% implant survival. Shoulder range of motion significantly improved and the mean American Shoulder and Elbow Society score was 89.8. There was presence of metal debris radiographically in 24% of patients. Twenty-nine percent of patients had evidence of radiolucency. Fourteen percent of patients had moderate superior subluxation.
Total shoulder arthroplasty with second generation cemented Trabecular Metal™ glenoid components yielded good outcomes at mean 6.6-year follow-up. Metal debris incidence and clinical outcomes were similar to short-term findings. The presence of metal debris did not significantly affect clinical outcomes. Continued observation of these patients will elucidate longer-term implant survival.
To compare the biomechanical properties of three plate stabilization techniques for midshaft clavicle fractures: anatomical bicortical locking construct, anatomical unicortical locking construct, and reconstruction bicortical locking construct.
We analyzed superior plating of the clavicle using an anatomical clavicle plate (Acumed) with both bicortical or unicortical screw fixation and a locking reconstruction plate (DePuy-Synthes). Twenty-one fourth generation composite clavicles were used for non-destructive stiffness testing in axial loading, bending, and torsion. Fifteen composite clavicles and 17 foam clavicles were used for cyclic failure testing using a combined loading method that included all three loading modes.
No significant differences were found between the three constructs in torsional stiffness nor in vertical bending loading. In axial loading, the anatomical bicortical locking construct was significantly stiffer than either anatomical unicortical locking construct or the reconstruction bicortical locking construct. The unicortical fixation was also significantly stiffer than the reconstruction bicortical locking construct. Regarding failure testing, there was not a significant difference between the bicortical and unicortical anatomical locking constructs; however, both were significantly stronger than bicortical screw fixation in the reconstruction plate.
Based on the biomechanical performance of these constructs, unicortical locked plate fixation may be a reasonable option in the treatment of displaced midshaft clavicle fracture fixation.
Health-related patient reported outcome measures are considered essential to determine the impact of disease on the life of individuals. Aim of this study is to culturally adapt the Italian version of the Shoulder Pain and Disability Index (SPADI). The secondary aim is to evaluate psychometric proprieties in patients with non-specific shoulder pain.
The current study is an analysis of a sample of 59 adult patients with non-specific shoulder pain. The SPADI was translated and cross-culturally adapted, and then psychometric properties were tested. Participants completed the Shoulder Pain and Disability Index-Italian (SPADI-I), 36-item short form health survey, the Oxford Shoulder Score, the Disability of Arm, Shoulder, and Hand scale and a pain intensity visual analogue scale.
SPADI-I included two domains. Internal consistency analysis showed good values for total (α = 0.84) and subscales (α = 0.94 and α = 0.76). For construct validity, there was good correlation between the visual analogue scale, the Oxford Shoulder Score, the DASH and the SPADI-I total score and subscales. Standard error of measurement and minimally detectable change were calculated.
The SPADI-I was culturally adapted into Italian. SPADI-I is centred on pain and disability of the shoulder only and can be considered as a useful tool in daily clinical practice for assessing musculoskeletal non-specific shoulder pain because of its good internal consistency and validity. Further studies should focus on other psychometric proprieties such as test re-test reliability, responsiveness and clinical interpretability to improve the available clinimetrics of the tool.
Over-lengthening of the radial neck has been shown to affect ulnohumeral kinematics and has been proposed to affect radiocapitellar pressures. We hypothesized that an incremental increase in radial neck height increases the capitellar contact pressure and reduces the coronoid contact pressure. Knowledge of the effects of over-lengthening is clinically important in preventing pain and degenerative changes due to overstuffing.
Six human cadaveric elbows were prepared on a custom-designed apparatus simulating muscle loads and passive flexion from 0° to 90° under gravity valgus torque while measuring joint contact pressures in this biomechanical study. Each elbow was tested sequentially starting with the intact specimen followed by insertion of a radial head prosthesis with 0, +2, and +4 mm of radial neck height, respectively.
Capitellar mean contact pressures significantly increased after insertion of +2 and +4 mm radial head prostheses (p < 0.03). The capitellar mean contact pressure with a 0 mm radial head prosthesis was 97 KPa. Insertion of +2 mm and +4 mm radial heads increased mean contact pressures to 391 KPa (p = 0.001) and 619 KPa (p = 0.001), respectively, with 90° of elbow flexion.
Increasing radial prosthesis height by 2 mm significantly increases capitellar contact pressures and reduces coronoid contact pressures.
Elbow fracture dislocations are complex injuries that can provide a challenge for experienced surgeons. Current classifications fail to provide a comprehensive system that encompasses all of the elements and patterns seen in elbow fracture dislocations.
The commonly used elbow fracture dislocation classifications are reviewed and the three-column concept of elbow fracture dislocation is described. This concept is applied to the currently recognised injury patterns and the literature on management algorithms.
Current elbow fracture dislocation classification systems only describe one element of the injury, or only include one pattern of elbow fracture dislocation. A new comprehensive classification system based on the three-column concept of elbow fracture dislocation is presented with a suggested algorithm for managing each injury pattern.
The three-column concept may improve understanding of injury patterns and treatment and leads to a comprehensive classification of elbow fracture dislocations with algorithms to guide treatment.
Clavicle malunion occurs in two-thirds of all clavicle fractures treated conservatively. It can lead to pain, shoulder dysfunction and cosmetic complaints. Surgical treatment of all midshaft fractures will lead to overtreatment, as not all malunions are symptomatic. In the past, several treatment modalities for correcting malunion of the clavicle have been described, and all have been successful but none have shown superiority. This article describes a new surgical technique with excising a wedge to realign the clavicle malunion.