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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Arthroscopic repair of subscapularis tears: preliminary data from a prospective multicentre study.

TLDR
This study confirms the good clinical and radiological results reported in the literature and indicates the trend towards improvements over time requires confirmation by longer-term studies, which will also have to establish that the increased wasting of the upper subscapularis muscle and fatty degeneration of the muscle belly have no adverse effects.
Abstract
Until the introduction of arthroscopic-assisted surgery for rotator cuff repair, the frequency of subscapularis tears was underestimated. These tears remain challenging to treat even with arthroscopy. The absence of a specific classification system has hampered communication about the treatment and outcomes of the various types of subscapularis tears. The objective of this prospective multicentre study was to validate the relevance of arthroscopic subscapularis tendon repair based on an assessment of short-term outcomes according to the initial extent of the anatomic lesions. A prospective multicentre study sponsored by the French Society for Arthroscopy was conducted from March 2010 to January 2011 in 208 patients with subscapularis lesions that were either isolated or associated with limited anterosuperior tears. The Constant and UCLA scores were used to assess clinical outcomes. Anatomic and prognostic results were evaluated based on the physical examination, preoperative and postoperative imaging study findings, and anatomic lesions. Clinical data were available for 103 patients after at least 1 year of follow-up and radiological data for 129 patients after at least 6 months. Our study confirms the good clinical and radiological results reported in the literature. Our classification system distinguishing four lesion patterns was applicable during the imaging workup. The main finding from this classification system was the difference in results between Type 2 and Type 3 lesions. The trend towards improvements over time requires confirmation by longer-term studies, which will also have to establish that the increased wasting of the upper subscapularis muscle and fatty degeneration of the muscle belly have no adverse effects.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term Results After Arthroscopic Repair of Isolated Subscapularis Tears.

TL;DR: Arthroscopic repair of isolated SSC tears results in significant clinical improvements and enduring tendon integrity, although SSC strength remains reduced in the long term.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arthroscopic repair of traumatic isolated subscapularis tendon lesions (Lafosse Type III or IV): a prospective magnetic resonance imaging-controlled case series with 1 year of follow-up.

TL;DR: Arthroscopic repair of higher-grade isolated SSC lesions provides reliable tendon healing accompanied by excellent functional results 1 year after surgery, according to clinical follow-up and magnetic resonance imaging investigations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ten-year clinical and anatomic follow-up after repair of anterosuperior rotator cuff tears: influence of the subscapularis.

TL;DR: Repairs of anterosuperior rotator cuff tears is satisfactory at 10 years, particularly if the subscapularis tear is not extensive, especially if the LDL cholesterol level is not too high.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of Clinical and Structural Outcomes by Subscapularis Tendon Status in Massive Rotator Cuff Tear.

TL;DR: This study showed a high failure rate of massive posterosuperior rotator cuff tear repair extending more than one-third of the subscapularis tendon, but arthroscopic debridement was a reasonable treatment method where comparable clinical and anatomic outcomes could be expected.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arthroscopic Repair of Isolated Partial- and Full-Thickness Upper Third Subscapularis Tendon Tears: Minimum 2-Year Outcomes After Single-Anchor Repair and Biceps Tenodesis.

TL;DR: Arthroscopic single-anchor repair of upper third SSC tendon tears led to improved function and decreased pain with high patient satisfaction and improved outcomes improved significantly postoperatively compared with preoperative scores.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fatty muscle degeneration in cuff ruptures. Pre- and postoperative evaluation by CT scan

TL;DR: A preoperative computed tomography scan grading muscular fatty degeneration in five stages was done in 63 patients scheduled for repair of a torn rotator cuff, finding that infraspinatus degeneration had a highly negative influence on the outcome of suprasp inatus repairs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Repair integrity and functional outcome after arthroscopic double-row rotator cuff repair. A prospective outcome study.

TL;DR: Arthroscopic double-row repair can result in improved repair integrity compared with open or miniopen repair methods, however, the retear rate for shoulders with large and massive tears remains higher than that for smaller tears, and shoulders withLarge repair defects (type V) demonstrate significantly inferior functional outcomes.
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Functional and Structural Outcome After Arthroscopic Full-Thickness Rotator Cuff Repair: Single-Row Versus Dual-Row Fixation

TL;DR: Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair yielded successful functional outcomes without significant difference between single and dual-row fixation techniques, however,Dual-row repairs excelled in structural outcome over the single-row technique.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isolated rupture of the tendon of the subscapularis muscle. Clinical features in 16 cases

TL;DR: A simple clinical manoeuvre called the 'lift-off test', reliably diagnosed or excluded clinically relevant rupture of the subscapularis tendon, and repair of the ruptured tendon was technically demanding and required good exposure to identify and protect the axillary nerve.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diagnosis and treatment of incomplete rotator cuff tears.

TL;DR: A system of grading partial-thickness tears based on location, depth, and area is presented in an effort to standardize the observations of various investigators and to permit comparison of the results of arthroscopic treatment.
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