1. Does lateralizing the glenosphere center of rotation by 4 mm decrease scapular notching in reverse shoulder arthroplasty with a 135° humeral component?
- Author
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Samuel M. Harmsen, Joey Robaina, David Campbell, Patrick J. Denard, Reuben Gobezie, and Evan S. Lederman
- Subjects
Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery - Abstract
Scapular notching continues to be associated with reverse shoulder arthroplasty (RSA) and is thought to lead to fewer outcomes. Decreasing the humeral neck-shaft angle (NSA) has been associated with decreased incidence of scapular notching. Lateralizing the glenosphere center of rotation (COR) has also been proposed to decrease notching; however, its effect in lower NSA RSA is less understood. The purpose of this study was to compare the impact of the medial (0 mm) and lateral (4 mm) COR on the incidence of scapular notching and clinical outcomes after RSA with a 135° NSA humeral component.We performed a multicenter retrospective comparative cohort of 82 patients with cuff tear arthropathy (41 in each cohort) who underwent RSA with a 135° NSA humeral component and a glenosphere COR of either 0 mm (medialized COR [MCOR]) or 4 mm (lateralized COR [LCOR]) of lateralization. RSA was performed using the same 135° humeral system and baseplate design. All patients had 2-year radiographic and clinical follow-up. Postoperative radiographs were evaluated for scapular notching. Clinical outcomes included American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons scores, visual analog pain scale, Simple Assessment Numeric Evaluation, and active range of motion.The overall incidence of scapular notching was 22.0%. There was no significant difference in scapular notching between cohorts: 24.4% in the MCOR and 19.5% in the LCOR (Lateralizing the glenosphere COR by 4 mm does not significantly affect the incidence of scapular notching in RSA when using a 135° NSA humeral component at short-term follow-up. Furthermore, such offset does not significantly improve functional outcome scoring systems or range of motion when compared with the MCOR (0 mm). Scapular notching did not have a negative impact on any clinical outcome measure or complication rate in this series.
- Published
- 2022