Department of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery, Schulthess Clinic, Zurich, Switzerland.
Department for Shoulder and Elbow Surgery, Charité - Centrum für Muskuloskeletale Chirurgie, Berlin, Germany.
Phys Ther. 2024 Jan 1;104(1). doi: 10.1093/ptj/pzad145.
Functional posterior shoulder instability (FPSI) (type B1) is a severe type of instability, mainly in teenagers and young adults, that leads to loss of function, pain, and stigmatization among peers. An experimental nonsurgical treatment protocol based on neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) showed very promising early results in the treatment of FPSI. The hypothesis of this study was that NMES-enhanced physical therapy leads to better outcomes than physical therapy alone as the current gold standard of treatment in patients with FPSI.
In this multicenter randomized controlled trial, patients with FPSI were randomly allocated in a 1:1 ratio to either 6 weeks of physical therapy or 6 weeks of physical therapy with simultaneous motion-triggered NMES. Baseline scores as well as outcome scores at 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months after the intervention were obtained. The predefined primary outcome of this trial was the Western Ontario Shoulder Instability Index (WOSI) at the 3-month time point.
Forty-nine patients were randomized and eligible for the trial. The group that received physical therapy with simultaneous motion-triggered NMES showed a significantly better main outcome measurement in terms of the 3-month WOSI score (64% [SD = 16%] vs 51% [SD = 24%]). Two-thirds of the patients from the physical therapist group crossed over to the group that received physical therapy with simultaneous motion-triggered NMES due to dissatisfaction after the 3-month follow-up and showed a significant increase in their WOSI score from 49% [SD = 8%] to 67% [SD = 24%]. The frequency of instability episodes showed a significant improvement in the group that received physical therapy with simultaneous motion-triggered NMES at the 3-month follow-up and beyond, while in the physical therapist group, no significant difference was observed.
The current study shows that NMES-enhanced physical therapy led to statistically significant and clinically relevant improvement in outcomes in the treatment of FPSI compared to conventional physical therapy alone-from which even patients with prior unsatisfactory results after conventional physical therapy can benefit.
Based on the results of this study, NMES-enhanced physical therapy is an effective new treatment option for FPSI, a severe type of shoulder instability. NMES-enhanced physical therapy should be preferred over conventional physical therapy for the treatment of patients with FPSI.
功能性后肩不稳(FPSI)(B1 型)是一种严重的不稳定类型,主要发生在青少年和年轻成年人中,导致功能丧失、疼痛和同伴的耻辱感。一种基于神经肌肉电刺激(NMES)的实验性非手术治疗方案在治疗 FPSI 方面显示出非常有前景的早期结果。本研究的假设是,NMES 增强型物理治疗比当前 FPSI 患者的金标准治疗——单纯物理治疗能带来更好的效果。
在这项多中心随机对照试验中,将 FPSI 患者以 1:1 的比例随机分配到物理治疗 6 周组或物理治疗 6 周联合运动触发 NMES 组。在干预后 6 周、3 个月、6 个月和 12 个月时获得基线评分和结局评分。本试验的主要预设结局是 3 个月时的 Western Ontario 肩不稳定指数(WOSI)。
49 名患者被随机分配并符合试验条件。接受运动触发 NMES 联合物理治疗的组在 3 个月时的主要结局测量(WOSI 评分 64%[标准差=16%] vs 51%[标准差=24%])上表现出显著更好的结果。由于对 3 个月随访后的结果不满意,物理治疗组中有三分之二的患者交叉到接受运动触发 NMES 联合物理治疗的组,他们的 WOSI 评分从 49%[标准差=8%]显著增加到 67%[标准差=24%]。在接受运动触发 NMES 联合物理治疗的组中,在 3 个月随访及以后,不稳定发作的频率显示出显著改善,而在物理治疗组中,未观察到显著差异。
本研究表明,与单纯常规物理治疗相比,NMES 增强型物理治疗在 FPSI 的治疗中可带来统计学上显著和临床上相关的改善结果——即使是先前对常规物理治疗不满意的患者也能从中受益。
基于这项研究的结果,NMES 增强型物理治疗是一种治疗 FPSI(一种严重的肩不稳定类型)的有效新治疗选择。NMES 增强型物理治疗应作为 FPSI 患者治疗的首选,而非常规物理治疗。