AI Article Synopsis

  • The subscapularis plays a crucial role in shoulder stability and motion, especially in the context of rotator cuff injuries.
  • Full thickness, retracted anterosuperior rotator cuff tears are particularly challenging to repair in younger patients, and treatment options vary significantly.
  • While pectoralis major and minor tendon transfers are potential surgical solutions, reverse total shoulder arthroplasty may be a more reliable option for patients with extensive damage and lower likelihoods of successful rehabilitation.

Article Abstract

The subscapularis is a dynamic structure serving as part of a shoulder force couple in the transverse plane, conferring stability, strength, and optimizing motion. Full-thickness, retracted anterosuperior rotator cuff tears with fatty infiltration pose a significant challenge to surgeons, particularly in younger patients with high functional demands in whom primary repair may not be feasible. This clinical scenario is rare, and most investigations on this topic are limited to small, retrospective case-series with short-term follow-up. For patients in whom joint preservation is desired, pectoralis major transfer or latissimus dorsi transfers are the most-reported surgical options, with heterogeneity in techniques and clinical outcomes reported. Recent research describes an alternative of pectoralis minor transfer for this same purpose with promising short-term outcomes. However, as with pectoralis major transfers for management of anterosuperior irreparable, the outcome is highly dependent on the integrity of the posterosuperior rotator cuff. Thus, when faced with a patient with a massive anterosuperior rotator cuff tear with atrophy, retraction, and other demographic or medical conditions that may predispose that patient to a lower likelihood of healing and doing the extensive rehabilitation from a tendon transfer, consider the alternative of a reverse total shoulder arthroplasty. The reverse is a reliable operation that affords patients excellent pain relief, reasonable function, typically with the ability to lift up to 25 to 30 pounds, with good patient-reported outcomes even in patients as young as 60 years of age. Tendon transfers, including pectoralis minor transfers, have a role, but we need to be thoughtful about indications and counsel patients on expected outcomes and the durability of those outcomes over time.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.arthro.2024.11.059DOI Listing

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