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New Concepts and Advances (Arthroscopic) for the Treatment of Shoulder Pain

New Concepts and Advances (Arthroscopic) for the Treatment of Shoulder Pain. William F Bennett MD. The Simple Shoulder. While a complex joint with complex function, general approaches to determining the non-descript, cause….is easy! I.e., intrinsic versus extrinsic. Intrinsic versus Extrinsic.

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New Concepts and Advances (Arthroscopic) for the Treatment of Shoulder Pain

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  1. New Concepts and Advances (Arthroscopic) for the Treatment of Shoulder Pain William F Bennett MD

  2. The Simple Shoulder • While a complex joint with complex function, general approaches to determining the non-descript, cause….is easy! • I.e., intrinsic versus extrinsic

  3. Intrinsic versus Extrinsic • Intrinsic- later and more descript…means pain coming from the shoulder joint itself • Extrinsic- pain that may cause shoulder pain but comes from sources outside the shoulder

  4. Extrinsic • Most common- cervical spine • Pancoast tumors of the lung • Thoracic spine • Peritoneal/Splenic irritation can cause pain at Erb’s point • Angina/MI • Metabolic/Oncologic problems, ie., bone marrow involvement like lymphoma/leukemia, parathyroid

  5. Extrinsic-Cervical Spine • General rule--trapezial pain-cervical -deltoid pain- intrinsic or from the shoulder Can have both shoulder and cervical spine affected which makes it more difficult Cervical spine may have radicular involvement

  6. Intrinsic • Once extrinsic has been ruled out then one can focus on the intrinsic causes. • If a certain shoulder motion whether it be flexion, abduction, external rotation or internal rotation causes pain in the deltoid area and not in the trapezial area, one is probably dealing with an intrinsic problem

  7. Before discussing intrinsic Causes Lets diverge and discuss the anatomy and function of the shoulder

  8. Anatomy • 4 joints-two are articulations • Glenohumeral joint • Acromioclavicular joint • Scapulothoracic articulation • Sternocalvicular articulation/joint • Discuss Bones-Bone models

  9. Ligaments/Capsule • Capsule is the “sac” • Normal sac allows motion in various planes • Abnormal sac restricts motion in various planes • Ligaments- hold bone to bone • Glenohumeral ligaments • Coracohumeral ligaments • Coracoacromial ligaments • Coracoclavicular ligaments

  10. Muscles/Tendons • Rotator Cuff are a confluence of 4 tendons from the following respective muscle bellies • Supraspinatus • Subscapularis • Infraspinatus • Teres minor • Biceps • Deltoid Bone models

  11. Bursae/Cartilage/Meniscus • Subacromial Bursae • Subdeltoid bursae • Subcoracoid bursae • Glenohumeral articular cartilage • Acromioclavicular meniscus

  12. Intrinsic Diagnoses • Impingement • Tendonitis • Bursitis • Rotator Cuff tear-complete • Rotator Cuff tear-partial • others

  13. Intrinsic Diagnoses • Acromioclavicular joint irritation/arthritis • Glenohumeral joint osteoarthritis • Rheumatologic joint • Pigmented Villonodular synovitis • Chondrometaplasia • Tumors-giant cell, synovial sarcoma

  14. Intrinsic Diagnoses • Instability/Subluxation-repetitive/chronic Atraumatic/multidirectional • Dislocation • Traumatic unidirectional • Biceps • Inflammation • Instability/subluxation • Tendonitis/avulsion

  15. Intrinsic Diagnoses • History compatible • Physical exam compatible • Radiologic exam compatible • MRI/MRA compatible • Less so- blood work, others • Each is a piece of the puzzle

  16. Physical Exam • Observation • Palpation • Range of Motion • Strength Test • Specific Tests for lesions • Hoppenfeld- Examination of the Extremies

  17. Treatment • “ITIS”- inflammation- tendonitis, bursitis • Rest, avoidance, NSAIDS, injections, therapy • Osteoarthritis- above plus possible total shoulder replacement, ac joint • Rotator Cuff Tears-above +/- repair • Instability/Dislocation-+/- repair • Frozen Shoulder • Biceps Inflammation • The arthroscope has become an important tool for diagnosis and treatment in virtually all afflictions of the shoulder

  18. Arthroscope • Fiber optic device • Triangulate-the surgeon never sees the actual inside of the joint- it is projected upon a monitor and as such, the working tools, “triangulate’ to the point of focus • Minimally invasive • Less pain • Less rehabilitation

  19. Treatment • Nsaids- short-term • Physical therapy • Injections • Surgery

  20. Physical Therapy Treat Inflammation- Iontophoresis Treat Tight Areas Stretch Treat Weakness Strentghen- rotator cuff muscles scapular stabilizers

  21. Injections • Must have correct diagnosis • Patient may have more than one pain location • Lidocaine Injection test • Areas- • Subacromial space • Glenohumeral joint • Ac joint • Bicipital sheath

  22. Shoulder Pain-traditionally was treated with long delays in surgical intervention-Why? • Shoulder pathology not well understood • Open repair required extensive incisions • Rehabilitation was long • Most importantly, in times past, the primary care givers was, in general, “under-the-impression” that shoulder surgical intervention was not that effective

  23. Arthroscopic Interventionutilized in • Impingement-bursitis, tendonitis • Rotator cuff tears • Instability or dislocation • AC joint arthritis • And yes even in Osteoarthritis

  24. Arthroscope has allowed for the further identification of subtle shoulder pathology, previously not identified • See articles- 1) Bennett WF. Subscapularis, Medial and Lateral Head Coracohumeral Ligament Insertion Anatomy: Arthroscopic Appearance and Incidence of "Hidden" Rotator Interval Lesions. Arthroscopy. 2001 Feb. 17(2) 173-180 2) Bennett WF. Visualization of the Anatomy of the Rotator Interval. Arthroscopy. 2001 17 107-111

  25. Arthroscopic Prospective outcomes are now Published • See Articles- Bennett WF: Arthroscopic Repair of Bennett WF: Arthroscopic Repair of Complete Anterosuperior Rotator Cuff Tears. 2 Year Follow-up. Arthroscopy, January 2003 Bennett WF: Arthroscopic Repair of Complete Subscapularis Tears. 2 Year Follow-up. Arthroscopy, February 2003 Bennett WF: Arthroscopic Repair of Complete Supraspinatus Tears. 2 Year Follow-up. Arthroscopy, March 2003  Bennett WF: Arthroscopic Repair of Massive Rotator Cuff Tears. 2-Year Follow-up Arthroscopy, April 2003

  26. Natural History of Rotator Cuff Tears • Recurrence of pain • Tears get bigger with time • Results of surgical intervention deteriorates with time • Muscle turns to fat • Tendon becomes inelastic

  27. At this Point • Most recently anatomy surrounding the rotator cuff and its interrelationship with the bicipital sheath has been identified, clarified, classified, arthroscopic reapir techniques developed and outcome studies published. • At this point I will move to the details of clinical research that I have been performing for the last 12 years.

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