AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates what factors lead patients to decide on surgery for degenerative rotator cuff tears that have recently become painful.
  • Patient-specific elements like younger age, quicker onset of pain, and previous shoulder surgeries were found to be significant predictors for surgical intervention rather than the specifics of the tear or its size.
  • Interestingly, while many tears increased in size after pain onset, the type and size of the tear did not correlate with the decision for surgery, suggesting that individual patient characteristics play a more crucial role.

Article Abstract

Background: The patient-related factors for the perceived need for surgery for degenerative rotator cuff tears are not known. The purpose of this study is to examine patient- and tear-specific factors leading to surgery in newly painful degenerative rotator cuff tears.

Methods: Asymptomatic, degenerative rotator cuff tears were followed prospectively to identify the onset of pain and tear enlargement. Newly painful tears were continually monitored with a focus on identifying patient-specific (age, occupation, activity level) and tear-specific (tear type and size, tear progression, American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score, muscle degeneration) factors that are associated with surgical intervention.

Results: Forty-eight of 169 newly painful shoulders were eventually managed surgically. Factors associated with surgical treatment included younger age (P = .0004), pain development earlier in surveillance (P = .0002), a greater increase in pain (P = .0001), a decline in American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score (P < .0001), and a history of contralateral shoulder surgery (P = .0006). Eighty-five of the 169 tears (50%) enlarged either before or within 2 years of pain development. Neither tear type (P = .13), tear enlargement (P = .67) nor tear size (P = .51) was associated with surgery. Neither the severity of muscle degeneration, occupational status, hand dominance, Shoulder Activity Score, nor changes in RAND-12 mental or physical scales differed between groups.

Discussion: For newly painful rotator cuff tears, patient-specific factors such as younger age and prior surgery on the contralateral shoulder are more predictive of future surgery than tear-specific factors or changes in tear size over time.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7197028PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jse.2019.08.005DOI Listing

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