TY - JOUR
T1 - Management of disorders of the rotator cuff
T2 - Proceedings of the ISAKOS upper extremity committee consensus meeting
AU - Arce, Guillermo
AU - Bak, Klaus
AU - Bain, Gregory
AU - Calvo, Emilio
AU - Ejnisman, Benno
AU - Di Giacomo, Giovanni
AU - Gutierrez, Vicente
AU - Guttmann, Dan
AU - Itoi, Eiji
AU - Ben Kibler, W.
AU - Ludvigsen, Tom
AU - Mazzocca, Augustus
AU - De Castro Pochini, Alberto
AU - Savoie, Felix
AU - Sugaya, Hiroyuki
AU - Uribe, John
AU - Vergara, Francisco
AU - Willems, Jaap
AU - Yoo, Yon Sik
AU - McNeil, John W.
AU - Provencher, Matthew T.
PY - 2013/11
Y1 - 2013/11
N2 - Abstract The goal of this article is to consolidate the International Society of Arthroscopy, Knee Surgery & Orthopaedic Sports Medicine (ISAKOS) Upper Extremity Committee's (UEC's) current knowledge on rotator cuff disease and management, as well as highlight key unresolved issues. The rotator cuff is an anatomically complex structure important for providing glenohumeral function and stability as part of a closed chain system. Current consensus suggests rotator cuff injuries are most accurately diagnosed, at levels similar to diagnosis by magnetic resonance imaging, with a combination of cuff- and impingement-specific clinical tests. Updates in the understanding of acromion morphology, the insertional anatomy of the rotator cuff, and the role of suprascapular nerve release may require changes to current classification systems and surgical strategies. Although initial management focuses on nonoperative protocols, discussion continues on whether surgery for isolated impingement is clinically more beneficial than rehabilitation. However, clear indications have yet to be established for the use of single- versus double-row repair because evidence confirms neither is clinically efficacious than the other. Biceps tenodesis, however, in non-isolated cuff tears has proven more successful in addressing the etiology of shoulder pain and yields improved outcomes over tenotomy. Data reviewing the benefits of tendon transfers, shoulder prostheses, and mechanical scaffolds, as well as new research on the potential benefit of platelet-rich plasma, pluripotential stem cells, and gene therapies, will also be presented.
AB - Abstract The goal of this article is to consolidate the International Society of Arthroscopy, Knee Surgery & Orthopaedic Sports Medicine (ISAKOS) Upper Extremity Committee's (UEC's) current knowledge on rotator cuff disease and management, as well as highlight key unresolved issues. The rotator cuff is an anatomically complex structure important for providing glenohumeral function and stability as part of a closed chain system. Current consensus suggests rotator cuff injuries are most accurately diagnosed, at levels similar to diagnosis by magnetic resonance imaging, with a combination of cuff- and impingement-specific clinical tests. Updates in the understanding of acromion morphology, the insertional anatomy of the rotator cuff, and the role of suprascapular nerve release may require changes to current classification systems and surgical strategies. Although initial management focuses on nonoperative protocols, discussion continues on whether surgery for isolated impingement is clinically more beneficial than rehabilitation. However, clear indications have yet to be established for the use of single- versus double-row repair because evidence confirms neither is clinically efficacious than the other. Biceps tenodesis, however, in non-isolated cuff tears has proven more successful in addressing the etiology of shoulder pain and yields improved outcomes over tenotomy. Data reviewing the benefits of tendon transfers, shoulder prostheses, and mechanical scaffolds, as well as new research on the potential benefit of platelet-rich plasma, pluripotential stem cells, and gene therapies, will also be presented.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.arthro.2013.07.265
DO - 10.1016/j.arthro.2013.07.265
M3 - Review article
C2 - 24041864
AN - SCOPUS:84886951504
VL - 29
SP - 1840
EP - 1850
JO - Arthroscopy - Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery
JF - Arthroscopy - Journal of Arthroscopic and Related Surgery
SN - 0749-8063
IS - 11
ER -