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HomeIntroductionSurgical detailsWhen cuff repair cannot be achievedArthrodesisWhen cuff repair is possiblePartial thickness cuff tearsResults of treatmentCuff integrity and quality of result of surgeryRehabilitation after cuff surgery

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More Information on Rotator Cuff Surgery.

Last updated Wednesday, January 26, 2005

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Figure 13 - Active flexion as a function of cuff integrity at followup
Figure 13 - Active flexion as a function of cuff integrity at followup

Figure 14 - Ability to perform activities of daily living as a function of cuff integrity at followup
Figure 14 - Ability to perform activities of daily living as a function of cuff integrity at followup

Figure 15 - Active flexion of the shoulders in which the repaired cuff was intact
Figure 15 - Active flexion of the shoulders in which the repaired cuff was intact

Results of treatment

Patients are usually pleased with the results of cuff surgery. Yet it may be difficult to determine what aspect of the treatment program is responsible for the improvement.

Cuff integrity and quality of result of surgery

It is known that many patients with deficient cuffs are surprisingly comfortable and functional and, therefore, never undergo surgery. It is also known that the tissue encountered at surgery is not infrequently insufficient to allow a durable repair, yet the patient is improved after surgery. These observations bring up the question of the relationship of cuff integrity to the quality of the result after cuff surgery. To help answer this question, we undertook a study of 105 of our own surgical repairs of chronic rotator cuff tears in 89 patients at an average of five years postoperatively. The patients' ages at the time of repair averaged 60 years (range 32 to 80). Eighty-six (82%) of the shoulders had no prior attempt at repair of the cuff.

In all of the surgeries an anterior-inferior acromioplasty was carried out. The involved tendon or tendons were mobilized as necessary. A bony trough was created in the humerus to reattach the mobilized tendons. The site of reattachment was usually in the sulcus adjacent to the humeral articular surface. In some cases the trough was placed somewhat more medially, if after mobilization the tendons did not reach their original anatomic attachment without undue tension when the arm was at the side. The cuff was protected from active use for three months postoperatively.

We correlated the functional result with the integrity of the cuff, as determined by expert ultrasonography. Expert ultrasonography was selected because of its superior accuracy to cost ratio and practicality.

We characterized the status of the cuff at surgery and at follow-up in terms of the integrity of the different tendons. No patient who had a partial thickness tear repaired had a full thickness retear. In 80 percent of shoulders with repaired full-thickness supraspinatus tears, the cuff was found to be intact at follow-up. Only 57 percent of cuffs that had tears involving both the supraspinatus and infraspinatus were intact at an average follow-up of six years. Less than one-third of the cuffs which had tears involving all three major tendons were intact after repair at an average of four years of follow-up. It is evident, therefore, that the rotator cuff is more likely to develop a secondary defect after the repair of a large tear. This may be a reflection of the age of the patient, the quality of the tissue, the quantity of tissue, the effect of tendon mobilization on tendon viability, or the greater difficulty in getting healthy tendon securely implanted in bone when there is a major deficiency in the cuff.

Patients were generally satisfied with the results of surgery, even when expert sonography showed that the cuff was no longer intact. This result indicates that patient satisfaction is not a reliable indication of cuff integrity.

Shoulders with intact repairs at follow-up had the greatest range of active flexion as compared to those with large recurrent defects (see figure 13). These patients also demonstrated the best function in activities of daily living. Where the cuff was not intact, the degree of functional loss was related to the size of the recurrent defect (see figure 14). These results indicate that integrity by ultrasound correlates with cuff function.

Patients with intact repairs of large tears had just as good function as did those with intact repairs of small tears. We found an overall greater incidence of recurrent defects in shoulders with repeat repairs. However, shoulders with intact cuffs after repeat repairs functioned as well as did those with intact primary repairs (see figure 15).

From this study we concluded that the integrity of the rotator cuff at follow-up (and not the size of the tear at the time of repair) is the major determinant of the outcome of surgical repair. An intact repair of a recurrent tear is likely to yield a result comparable to that of an intact repair of a primary tear. Likewise, intact repairs of large tears yield results comparable to intact repairs of small tears.

The chances of the repair of a large tear remaining intact, however, are not as good as those for a small tear. Older patients tended to have larger tears and to have a higher incidence of recurrent defects.


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