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Recurrent Instability After Arthroscopic Bankart Repair in Patients With Hyperlaxity and Near-Track Lesions. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the effects of capsuloligamentous laxity on the recurrence of shoulder instability after arthroscopic Bankart repair in patients with near-track lesions.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 173 patients who underwent the procedure between 2007 and 2019, specifically looking for factors that contribute to recurrent dislocations or perceived instability symptoms.
  • Findings revealed that younger age, smaller distance to dislocation, a history of multiple instability episodes, and hyperlaxity were significant predictors of recurrent instability, with hyperlaxity almost doubling the risk in patients with near-track lesions.

Article Abstract

Background: Recurrent anterior shoulder instability after arthroscopic Bankart repair presents a challenging clinical problem, with the primary stabilization procedure often portending the best chance for clinical success.

Purpose: To determine if capsuloligamentous laxity affects failure (recurrent dislocation, subluxation, and/or perceived instability symptoms) after arthroscopic Bankart repair in patients with near-track lesions (ie, those with smaller distance to dislocation [DTD]).

Study Design: Case-control study; Level of evidence, 3.

Methods: The authors retrospectively reviewed consecutive patients who underwent primary arthroscopic Bankart repair for recurrent anterior glenohumeral instability at a single institution between 2007 and 2019 and who had at least 2 years of follow-up data. Patients with glenoid bone loss >20%, off-track lesions, concomitant remplissage, or rotator cuff tear were excluded. Capsuloligamentous laxity, or hyperlaxity, was defined as external rotation >85° with the arm at the side and/or grade ≥2 in at least 2 planes with the shoulder at 90° of abduction. Near-track lesions were defined as those with a DTD <10 mm.

Results: Included were 173 patients (mean age, 20.5 years; mean DTD, 16.2 mm), of whom 16.8% sustained a recurrent dislocation and 6.4% had recurrent subluxations (defined as any subjective complaint of recurrent instability without frank dislocation), for an overall recurrent instability rate of 23.1%. The rate of revision stabilization was 15.6%. The mean time to follow-up was 7.4 years. Independent predictors of recurrent instability were younger age ( = .001), smaller DTD ( = .021), >1 preoperative instability episode ( < .001), and the presence of hyperlaxity during examination under anesthesia ( = .013). Among patients with near-track lesions, those with hyperlaxity had a recurrent instability rate almost double that of patients without hyperlaxity (odds ratio, 34.1; = .04). The increased rate of failure and recurrent dislocation in the near-track hyperlaxity cohort remained elevated, even in patients with no bone loss.

Conclusion: Capsuloligamentous shoulder laxity was a significant independent risk factor for failure after primary arthroscopic Bankart repair without remplissage and was more predictive of failure in patients with versus without near-track lesions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10540590PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23259671231200231DOI Listing

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