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Athletic Shoulder Injuries Sean F. Bak, MD Sports Medicine and Shoulder Reconstruction Novi, MI Shoulder Injuries-Overview 1. Chronic Shoulder Pain 2. Acute Shoulder Injuries and Fractures Chronic Shoulder Injuries “My shoulder hurts. Must be that rotator cuff…” Anatomy Anatomy Causes of Chronic Shoulder Pain 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Rotator Cuff Tendonitis/Bursitis AC arthritis Labral tear Shoulder arthritis Rotator Cuff tear Impingement/Bursitis • Most common cause of shoulder pain • Usually temporary • Generally does not need surgery • Age 20-70 Impingement/Bursitis Impingement • Rotator cuff tendonitis • Bursitis • Spur thought to be principal cause Impingement Internal Impingement Overhead athletes Cuff between humeral head and posterior glenoid Articular sided cuff tension Impingement • • • • Stage 1: Bursitis Stage 2: Tendonitis Stage 3: Rotator cuff tear Without treatment, stages progress with age Impingement • Process can be stopped! • 70-80% resolve without surgery – Motrin, Aleve, etc. – Physical therapy – Injections Impingement • Surgery – Arthroscopic – Clean out inflammation – Remove spur – Sling 3-5 days Impingement AC Joint Arthritis AC Joint Arthritis • Pain on top of shoulder • NOT the ball-socket joint • Male predominance • Weightlifters • Age 20-70 AC Joint Arthritis • Rest, modify activities • Injection • Surgery: Remove the end of the collarbone – Scope or open Labral Tears Labral Tear • • • • Deep shoulder pain Pain with rotation Throwing athletes Shoulder dislocations Labral Tears Pathoanatomy • Glenoid labrum – GHL attachment • Depth and conformity • Detachment – Anteroinferior – Superior-SLAP Labral Tears • Bankart Tear – Traumatic dislocation – Anteroinferior labrum Labral Tears • SLAP tears – Superior labrum – More chronic – Overhead athletes Labral Tear • Physical Therapy – Post capsule stretch • Injection • Arthroscopic treatment recommended for younger patients Labral Tear-Postop Rehab • Sling 4-6 wks • PT for 2-3 mos • Normal activities 3 mos • Return to sports 5 mos Rotator Cuff Tear Rotator Cuff Tear • Pain with movement • Night pain • Not always associated with weakness • Develops with time, age • Age 50-80 Rotator Cuff Tears • Rotator cuff tears agerelated • Rarely traumatic • Years of gradual degeneration Rotator Cuff Tears • Injury may aggravate a previously asymptomatic tear • Tear enlarges with time • Symptoms may not match progression Rotator Cuff Tears • All full thickness rotator cuff tears enlarge with time • Rate of progression varies widely Rotator Cuff Tears • Physical therapy very successful – Bursitis – Rotator cuff tendonitis – Rotator cuff tears Rotator Cuff Tears • Therapy alleviates symptoms, does not heal tear • Not everyone requires surgery Rotator Cuff Repair “The smaller the incision the quicker the recovery” Rotator Cuff Repair • Open rotator cuff repair 1930’s - 90’s • Miniopen 1990’s • Arthroscopic 2000’s Rotator Cuff Repair Rotator Cuff Repair Rotator Cuff Repair Rotator Cuff Repair Rotator Cuff Repair Rotator Cuff Repair Rotator Cuff Repair Rotator Cuff Repair • Success rate of arthroscopic repair only recently has equaled traditional methods • Less pain • Less complications Rotator Cuff Repair-Recovery • Initial arthroscopic results substandard – Better techniques today • Patients removed slings – Strict adherence to therapy Rotator Cuff Repair-Recovery No change in time to healing of rotator cuff Open: Sling for 6 wks Arthroscopic: Sling for 6 wks Full Recovery: 6-12 mos NO CHANGE IN RECOVERY WITH ARTHROSCOPY! Shoulder Trauma-Acute Shoulder Injuries Clavicle Fracture • Trauma to lateral shoulder with arm adducted • Pain, clavicle deformity • +/- neurovascular injury Clavicle Fracture • Nonoperative treatment – Sling for 2 wks followed by ROM – Return to normal activities 6-8 wks – Traditional treatment Shoulder Trauma Clavicle Fractures • Most clavicle fx heal • Most pts have no disability • Most patients have a “bump” “All clavicles heal well” • More recent studies have shown a 1525% nonunion rate “All clavicles heal well”?? • Union does not equate with good result • 46% did not consider themselves fully recovered by 10 years post-injury Clavicle Fracture-Surgery?? • Operative Treatment – Nonunion – Open fractures – Markedly displaced/No cortical contact – > 2 cm shortening – ? Better Function Clavicle Fracture • Operative Treatment-Plates – Direct compression – Anatomic reduction Con’s – Plate irritation – Large dissection Clavicle Fracture • Rehab – Sling for 2 weeks – Weeks 2-6: Begin motion – Weeks 6-12: Full motion, strength AC Separation AC Separation • Fall onto lateral shoulder with arm adducted • Pain directly at AC joint • Prominent distal clavicle in higher grades AC Separation Classification Progressive Injury • Type I-VI increasing severity AC Separation Treatment Recommendations Nonoperative Management • Type I/II Separation – Analgesia – Sling for comfort – Early ROM AC Separation Treatment Recommendations Acute Surgical Management • Type IV/V/VI AC Separation Treatment Recommendations • Type III AC Separation – No clear benefit of acute surgery – Consider surgery for: • High demand patients • Chronic pain after separation AC Separation Primary AC Joint Fixation Complications • Intraarticular injury • Hardware Complications – Breakage – Migration AC Separation Primary AC Joint Fixation Clavicular Hook Plate Plate Fixation • Maintains AC Joint • Soft Tissue Repair • Require Plate Removal AC Separation Secondary Stabilization Coracoclavicular Reconstruction • Tibialis allograft around base of coracoid thru bone tunnels on clavicle • Recreate anatomy AC Separation • Rehab (Operative) – Sling for 6 weeks – Pendulums/Wall walk at 4 wks – Active ROM 6 wks – Strengthening 12 wks Proximal Humerus Fractures Neer Classification-Fracture Parts Articular segment Greater Tuberosity Lesser Tuberosity Humeral shaft Proximal Humerus Fractures Non-displaced Displaced 80% 20% Proximal Humerus Fractures • Neuro Injury • Not uncommon • Axillary nerve • Cannot test for months • Upper trunk plexopathy • PAIN Proximal Humerus Fractures • Sling, swathe • Early ROM (7-10 days) • Stable fracture pattern • Frequent xrays and exam Proximal Humerus Fracture • Operative Options – Percutaneous pinning – ORIF • Suture vs Plate/screw fixation – ReplacementHemiarthroplasty • Glenoid replacement contraindicated Proximal Humerus Fractures • • • • Wires Sutures Plates/screws IM Nails Proximal Humerus Fracture • Operative Options – – – – Age Bone quality Fx pattern Have various options available and consented for Minimally Invasive Surgery • Percutaneous reduction • Percutaneous fixation • Indications – Specific fx patterns – Compliance! PH Fx 45 y.o. RHD female PH Fx Reduction PH Fx Provisional Fixation PH Fx Articular Surface-Shaft Fixation PH Fx 2nd Pin Fixation PH Fx Final Reconstruction PH Fx Management • Outpatient • Interscalene anesthesia • F/U POD #4 • Check x-rays PH Fx Perc Pinning – Rehab? No rehab while pins in Pin removal in OR at 4 weeks Begin PT