A biomechanical confirmation of the relationship between critical shoulder angle (CSA) and articular joint loading.

J Shoulder Elbow Surg

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Traumatology, Hôpital Gabriel Montpied, Clermont-Ferrand, France.

Published: October 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study investigates how changes in the critical shoulder angle (CSA) affect shoulder biomechanics, specifically looking at muscle and joint forces during arm movements.
  • - Researchers modified the CSA in a computer model to see how it influenced forces during shoulder motions, finding that a higher CSA increases shear forces while a lower CSA increases compressive forces.
  • - The findings suggest that an increased CSA may lead to higher shear forces, potentially causing rotator cuff issues, while a reduced CSA could result in more compressive forces, contributing to joint wear and tear.

Article Abstract

Background: The critical shoulder angle (CSA) has been shown to be correlated with shoulder disease states. The biomechanical hypothesis to explain this correlation is that the CSA changes the shear and compressive forces on the shoulder. The objective of this study is to test this hypothesis by use of a validated computational shoulder model. Specifically, this study assesses the impact on glenohumeral biomechanics of modifying the CSA.

Methods: An inverse dynamics 3-dimensional musculoskeletal model of the shoulder was used to quantify muscle forces and glenohumeral joint forces. The CSA was changed by altering the attachment point of the middle deltoid into a normal CSA (33°), a reduced CSA of 28°, and an increased CSA of 38°. Subject-specific kinematics of slow and fast speed abduction in the scapular plane and slow and fast forward flexion measured by a 3-dimensional motion capture system were used to quantify joint reaction shear and compressive forces.

Results: Increasing the CSA results in increased superior-inferior forces (shearing forces; integrated over the range of motion; P < .05). Reducing CSA results in increased lateromedial (compressive) forces for both the maximum and integrated sum of the forces over the whole motion (P < .01).

Discussion/conclusion: Changes in the CSA modify glenohumeral joint biomechanics with increasing CSA producing higher shear forces that could contribute to rotator cuff overuse, whereas reducing the CSA results in higher compressive forces that contribute to joint wear.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jse.2020.03.002DOI Listing

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