Glenohumeral joint loading is impacted by rotator cuff tear severity during functional task performance.

Clin Biomech (Bristol)

Biomedical Engineering, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA; Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA, USA. Electronic address:

Published: December 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Rotator cuff tears, affecting shoulder function, range in severity from small to massive, influencing how the shoulder joint bears load during activities.
  • Eight computational models were created to simulate varying rotator cuff tear severities and analyzed how these tears impacted joint contact forces during five functional tasks.
  • Results indicated that joint contact forces decreased with increased tear severity, particularly with the involvement of specific muscles, while remaining oriented within the glenoid rim to maintain joint stability, highlighting the need for further research on compensatory mechanisms.

Article Abstract

Background: Rotator cuff tear is a common musculoskeletal injury, negatively affecting shoulder function. Rotator cuff tear severity ranges from small to massive tears, but it is unclear how tear severity affects glenohumeral joint loading and how changes contribute to secondary injury. This study's objective was to determine how glenohumeral joint contact force changes with tear severity during functional task performance using computational models.

Methods: Eight models of increasing tear severity were developed, ranging from no rotator cuff tear to massive three-tendon tears. Simulations were performed using models representing increasing tear severity and kinematics for five functional tasks (n = 720 simulations). For each task, magnitude and orientation of peak resultant joint contact force for each tear severity was identified, then compared to the no rotator cuff tear model.

Findings: For all tasks, compared to the no rotator cuff tear model, joint contact force magnitude decreased 9.5% on average with infraspinatus involvement, then plateaued at 20.8% average decrease with subscapularis involvement. Projected orientation of peak joint contact force vector was located more superior in the glenoid with increased tear severity, with significant changes (p < 0.0003) for all tasks with infraspinatus involvement.

Interpretation: Decreased magnitude and superior orientation of joint contact force suggest fewer intact muscles contribute to force distribution across the joint, although more work is needed characterizing associated compensation strategies. All force vectors remained oriented within the glenoid rim for all tasks and models, suggesting the system prioritizes joint stability. This work identifies how joint contact force changes with rotator cuff tear severity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2021.105494DOI Listing

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