Scheibel Markus, Tsynman Alexander, Magosch Petra, Schroeder Ralf Juergen, Habermeyer Peter
Center for Musculoskeletal Surgery and Department of Radiology, Campus Virchow, Charité-Universitaetsmedizin Berlin, Augustenburger Platz 1, 13353 Berlin, Germany.
Am J Sports Med. 2006 Oct;34(10):1586-93. doi: 10.1177/0363546506288852. Epub 2006 Jun 26.
Postoperative subscapularis muscle insufficiency after open shoulder stabilization procedures represents an unrecognized condition.
Primary and revision open shoulder stabilization using the inverted L-shaped tenotomy approach impairs subscapularis muscle recovery and affects final clinical outcome.
Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3.
Twenty-five patients who underwent primary (group 1: n = 13; mean age, 36.5 years; follow-up, 48 months) or revision (group 2: n = 12; mean age, 34.2 years; follow-up, 52 months) open shoulder stabilization procedures were followed up clinically (clinical subscapularis tests and signs, Constant score, and Rowe score) and by magnetic resonance imaging (tendon integrity, defined muscle diameters, and signal intensity analysis [ratio infraspinatus/upper subscapularis muscle and infraspinatus/lower subscapularis muscle]). A third group (group 0) of 12 healthy volunteers served as a control.
Clinical signs for subscapularis muscle insufficiency were present in 53.8% of cases in group 1 and 91.6% of cases in group 2. There were no significant differences between groups with regard to Constant and Rowe scores (P > .05). On magnetic resonance imaging, no complete tendon ruptures were found. The mean vertical diameter of the subscapularis muscle and the mean transverse diameter of the upper subscapularis muscle portion were significantly greater in group 0 than in group 1 and greater in group 1 than in group 2 (P < .05). The mean transverse diameter of the lower subscapularis muscle was comparable in all groups (P > .05). The signal intensity analysis revealed the infraspinatus/upper subscapularis muscle ratio was greater in group 0 than in group 1 and greater in group 1 than in group 2 (P < .05). The infraspinatus/lower subscapularis muscle ratio was lower in group 0 than in groups 1 and 2 (P < .05).
Open shoulder stabilization using an inverted L-shaped tenotomy approach may lead to atrophy and fatty infiltration, particularly of the upper part of the subscapularis muscle, resulting in postoperative subscapularis muscle insufficiency. Revision procedures using the same approach may further compromise clinical subscapularis muscle function and structure. The lower portion of the subscapularis muscle seems to have a compensating effect that may, in addition to a meticulous capsulolabral reconstruction, account for the uncompromised overall clinical outcome.
开放性肩关节稳定手术术后肩胛下肌功能不全是一种未被认识的情况。
采用倒L形肌腱切断术进行初次及翻修开放性肩关节稳定手术会损害肩胛下肌恢复并影响最终临床结果。
队列研究;证据等级,3级。
对25例行初次(第1组:n = 13;平均年龄36.5岁;随访48个月)或翻修(第2组:n = 12;平均年龄34.2岁;随访52个月)开放性肩关节稳定手术的患者进行临床随访(临床肩胛下肌测试及体征、Constant评分和Rowe评分),并通过磁共振成像(肌腱完整性、确定的肌肉直径及信号强度分析[冈下肌/肩胛下肌上部肌肉比值和冈下肌/肩胛下肌下部肌肉比值])进行评估。第三组(第0组)12名健康志愿者作为对照。
第1组53.8%的病例和第2组91.6%的病例存在肩胛下肌功能不全的临床体征。各组在Constant评分和Rowe评分方面无显著差异(P > 0.05)。磁共振成像检查未发现肌腱完全断裂。第0组肩胛下肌的平均垂直直径和肩胛下肌上部肌肉的平均横径显著大于第1组,第1组大于第2组(P < 0.05)。各组肩胛下肌下部肌肉的平均横径相当(P > 0.05)。信号强度分析显示,第0组的冈下肌/肩胛下肌上部肌肉比值大于第1组,第1组大于第2组(P < 0.05)。第0组的冈下肌/肩胛下肌下部肌肉比值低于第1组和第2组(P < 0.05)。
采用倒L形肌腱切断术进行开放性肩关节稳定手术可能导致萎缩和脂肪浸润,尤其是肩胛下肌上部,从而导致术后肩胛下肌功能不全。采用相同方法进行翻修手术可能会进一步损害肩胛下肌的临床功能和结构。肩胛下肌下部似乎具有代偿作用,除了细致的关节盂唇重建外,这可能是总体临床结果未受影响的原因。