Orthopedic Institute, Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Sports Health. 2009 Mar;1(2):125-30. doi: 10.1177/1941738108331200.
There is no consensus for the optimal postoperative rehabilitation protocol after rotator cuff repairs.
To determine if there is sufficient level I or II evidence available in the literature for establishment of a uniform, optimal rotator cuff rehabilitation protocol.
A systematic review of level I and II English-language, prospective, randomized controlled trials published between 1966 and 2008 was performed. MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and secondary references were appraised for studies that met the inclusion criteria. Search terms included rotator cuff, supraspinatus, infraspinatus, subscapularis, teres minor, rehab, rehabilitation, physical therapy, and physiotherapy.
Inclusion criteria were English-language level I or level II studies, including randomized clinical trials involving the rehabilitation of rotator cuff repairs. Exclusion criteria were non-English language, level IV or V studies, or studies involving shoulder rehabilitation of diagnoses other than rotator cuff repairs. Three independent reviewers arrived at a consensus for including 4 studies in this review out of 12 studies identified by the literature search.
Included studies underwent worksheet quality appraisal independently by each of the 3 authors identifying strengths, weaknesses, and biases. The quality appraisal was then discussed among the authors and consensus reached regarding the strengths, weaknesses, and value of the included studies.
Two studies examined the use of continuous passive motion for rotator cuff rehabilitation, and 2 studies compared an unsupervised, standardized rehabilitation program to a supervised, individualized rehabilitation program. These studies did not support the use of continuous passive motion in rotator cuff rehabilitation, and no advantage was shown with a supervised, individualized rehabilitation protocol compared to an unsupervised, standardized home program. Each investigation had weaknesses in study design that decreased the validity of its findings.
There is not enough high-level evidence to develop an evidence-based medicine approach to rotator cuff rehabilitation. There is a need for well-designed level I and level II trials to elucidate the optimal rotator cuff repair rehabilitation protocol.
对于肩袖修复术后的最佳康复方案,目前尚无共识。
确定文献中是否有足够的 I 级或 II 级证据来建立统一的、最佳的肩袖康复方案。
系统检索了 1966 年至 2008 年间发表的 I 级和 II 级英语前瞻性随机对照试验。评估了 MEDLINE、EMBASE、Cochrane 系统评价数据库和二级参考文献中符合纳入标准的研究。检索词包括肩袖、冈上肌、冈下肌、肩胛下肌、小圆肌、康复、康复治疗、物理治疗和理疗。
纳入标准为 I 级或 II 级的英语研究,包括涉及肩袖修复康复的随机临床试验。排除标准为非英语、IV 级或 V 级研究,或涉及除肩袖修复以外的其他诊断的肩部康复研究。通过文献检索,有 3 位独立的评审员对纳入本综述的 4 项研究达成共识。
纳入的研究由 3 位作者中的每一位独立进行工作表质量评估,以确定其优势、劣势和偏倚。然后,作者们对质量评估进行了讨论,并就纳入研究的优势、劣势和价值达成了共识。
有 2 项研究探讨了连续被动运动在肩袖康复中的应用,2 项研究比较了非监督标准化康复方案与监督个体化康复方案。这些研究不支持连续被动运动在肩袖康复中的应用,也没有显示监督个体化康复方案比非监督标准化家庭康复方案更有优势。每一项研究在设计上都存在弱点,降低了其研究结果的有效性。
没有足够的高级别证据来制定基于循证医学的肩袖康复方法。需要进行精心设计的 I 级和 II 级试验,以阐明最佳的肩袖修复康复方案。