Erschienen in:
12.11.2015 | Shoulder
Similar results comparing early and late surgery in open repair of traumatic rotator cuff tears
verfasst von:
Soheila Zhaeentan, Anders Von Heijne, André Stark, Elisabet Hagert, Björn Salomonsson
Erschienen in:
Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy
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Ausgabe 12/2016
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Abstract
Purpose
The purpose was to investigate whether surgical repair earlier or later than 3 months after injury may result in similar outcomes and patient satisfaction.
Methods
Seventy-three patients (75 shoulders, 58 males, mean age 59) who had undergone surgical intervention for traumatic rotator cuff tears from 1999 to 2011 were assessed by MRI, clinical examination and Western Ontario Rotator Cuff Index (WORC) as a primary outcome measure and Oxford Shoulder score (OSS), Constant–Murley score (CS) and EQ-5D as secondary. The patients treated less than 3 months after injury (n = 39) were compared with patients treated more than 3 months after injury (n = 36). The average follow-up time was 56 months (range 14–149), and the average time from injury to repair for all patients was 16 weeks (range 3–104). A single senior radiologist performed a blinded evaluation of all the MRIs. Rotator cuff integrity, presence of arthritis, fatty degeneration and muscle atrophy were evaluated.
Results
No differences were found for any of the assessed outcomes (WORC, OSS, CS and EQ-5D) between the two groups. The mean WORC % was 77 % for both groups. Re-tear frequency was 24 %, nine in both groups. Patients with re-tear reported less satisfaction with their outcome.
Conclusions
The surgical treatment of symptomatic traumatic rotator cuff tears repairable later than 3 months after injury yields a good functional outcome, a high level of subjective patient satisfaction, and at the same level for patients receiving earlier treatment. Based on our findings, surgical repair could be encouraged whenever technically possible.
Level of evidence
Retrospective Comparative Study, Level III.