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Reliability of forced internal rotation and active internal rotation to assess lateral instability of the biceps pulley

Authors :
Simone Cerciello
Celeste Bertone
Riccardo D’Ambrosi
Chiara Ceoldo
Alessandro Castagna
Silvana De Giorgi
Andrea Grasso
Roberto Padua
Giacomo Delle Rose
Antonello Pannone
Alberto Costa
Pietro Randelli
Dario Petriccioli
Carmine Latte
Alessandro Beccarini
Matteo Olivieri
Paolo Avanzi
Alfredo Schiavone Panni
Giorgio Rotundo
Vincenzo Denaro
Barbara Salcher
Vincenzo Campagna
Vincenza Ragone
Marco Mugnaini
Piergiorgio Pirani
Claudio Zorzi
Umile Giuseppe Longo
Antonello Panella
Paolo Arrigoni
Manlio Panascì
Gino Viola
Arrigoni, Paolo
Delle Rose, Giacomo
D'Ambrosi, Riccardo
Rotundo, Giorgio
Campagna, Vincenzo
Pirani, Piergiorgio
Panascì, Manlio
Petriccioli, Dario
Bertone, Celeste
Grasso, Andrea
Latte, Carmine
Costa, Alberto
Viola, Gino
De Giorgi, Silvana
Panella, Antonello
Padua, Roberto
Beccarini, Alessandro
Salcher, Barbara
Olivieri, Matteo
Mugnaini, Marco
Pannone, Antonello
Ceoldo, Chiara
Longo, Umile Giuseppe
Denaro, Vincenzo
Cerciello, Simone
Schiavone Panni, Alfredo
Avanzi, Paolo
Zorzi, Claudio
Ragone, Vincenza
Castagna, Alessandro
Randelli, Pietro
Source :
Europe PubMed Central

Abstract

Purpose the aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between positive painful forced internal rotation (FIR) and lateral pulley instability in the presence of a pre-diagnosed posterosuperior cuff tear. The same investigation was conducted for painful active internal rotation (AIR). Methods a multicenter prospective study was conducted in a series of patients scheduled to undergo arthroscopic posterosuperior cuff repair. Pain was assessed using a visual analog scale (VAS) and the Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand questionnaire (DASH) was administered. The VAS score at rest, DASH score, and presence/absence of pain on FIR and AIR were recorded and their relationships with lesions of the lateral pulley, cuff tear patterns and shape of lesions were analyzed. Results the study population consisted of 115 patients (mean age: 55.1 years) recruited from 12 centers. The dominant arm was affected in 72 cases (62.6%). The average anteroposterior extension of the lesion was 1.61 cm. The mean preoperative VAS and DASH scores were 6.1 and 41.8, respectively. FIR and AIR were positive in 94 (81.7%) and 85 (73.9%) cases, respectively. The lateral pulley was compromised in 50 cases (43.4%). Cuff tears were partial articular in 35 patients (30.4%), complete in 61 (53%), and partial bursal in 19 (16.5%). No statistical correlation between positive FIR or AIR and lateral pulley lesions was detected. Positive FIR and AIR were statistically associated with complete lesions. Negative FIR was associated with the presence of partial articular tears. Conclusions painful FIR in the presence of a postero-superior cuff tear does not indicate lateral pulley instability. When a cuff tear is suspected, positive FIR and AIR are suggestive of full-thickness tear patterns while a negative FIR suggests a partial articular lesion. Level of evidence level I, validating cohort study with good reference standards.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Europe PubMed Central
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eab7f5506c9f1c86afb58779f802464e