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  3. Severity of rotator cuff disorders and additional load affect fluoroscopy-based shoulder kinematics during arm abduction.
 

Severity of rotator cuff disorders and additional load affect fluoroscopy-based shoulder kinematics during arm abduction.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/197696
Publisher DOI
10.1186/s10195-024-00774-2
PubMed ID
38850466
Description
BACKGROUND

Rotator cuff disorders, whether symptomatic or asymptomatic, may result in abnormal shoulder kinematics (scapular rotation and glenohumeral translation). This study aimed to investigate the effect of rotator cuff tears on in vivo shoulder kinematics during a 30° loaded abduction test using single-plane fluoroscopy.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

In total, 25 younger controls, 25 older controls and 25 patients with unilateral symptomatic rotator cuff tears participated in this study. Both shoulders of each participant were analysed and grouped on the basis of magnetic resonance imaging into healthy, rotator cuff tendinopathy, asymptomatic and symptomatic rotator cuff tears. All participants performed a bilateral 30° arm abduction and adduction movement in the scapular plane with handheld weights (0, 2 and 4 kg) during fluoroscopy acquisition. The range of upward-downward scapular rotation and superior-inferior glenohumeral translation were measured and analysed during abduction and adduction using a linear mixed model (loads, shoulder types) with random effects (shoulder ID).

RESULTS

Scapular rotation was greater in shoulders with rotator cuff tendinopathy and asymptomatic rotator cuff tears than in healthy shoulders. Additional load increased upward during abduction and downward during adduction scapular rotation (P < 0.001 in all groups but rotator cuff tendinopathy). In healthy shoulders, upward scapular rotation during 30° abduction increased from 2.3° with 0-kg load to 4.1° with 4-kg load and on shoulders with symptomatic rotator cuff tears from 3.6° with 0-kg load to 6.5° with 4-kg load. Glenohumeral translation was influenced by the handheld weights only in shoulders with rotator cuff tendinopathy (P ≤ 0.020). Overall, superior glenohumeral translation during 30° abduction was approximately 1.0 mm with all loads.

CONCLUSIONS

The results of glenohumeral translation comparable to control but greater scapular rotations during 30° abduction in the scapular plane in rotator cuff tears indicate that the scapula compensates for rotator cuff deficiency by rotating. Further analysis of load-dependent joint stability is needed to better understand glenohumeral and scapula motion.

LEVEL OF EVIDENCE

Level 2.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

Ethical approval was obtained from the regional ethics committee (Ethics Committee Northwest Switzerland EKNZ 2021-00182), and the study was registered at clinicaltrials.gov on 29 March 2021 (trial registration number NCT04819724, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04819724 ).
Date of Publication
2024-06-08
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
Fluoroscopy Glenohumeral translation Handheld weight Rotator cuff tear Rotator cuff tendinopathy Scaption Scapular rotation Shoulder injury
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Croci, Eleonora
Hess, Hanspeterorcid-logo
School of Biomedical and Precision Engineering (SBPE) University of Bern
Genter, Jeremy
Baum, Cornelia
Kovacs, Balazs Krisztian
Nüesch, Corina
Baumgartner, Daniel
Gerber, Kateorcid-logo
School of Biomedical and Precision Engineering (SBPE) University of Bern
Müller, Andreas Marc
Mündermann, Annegret
Additional Credits
School of Biomedical and Precision Engineering (SBPE) University of Bern
Series
Journal of orthopaedics and traumatology
Publisher
Springer
ISSN
1590-9999
Access(Rights)
open.access
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