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Common Problems of the Shoulder. Part One Age >40. First, a little Anatomy. Shoulder Girdle Muscles. Shoulder Pain. Rule out Extrinsic Sources Referred Abdomen: subdiaphragmatic Pulmonary disease: Pancoast tumor Radicular Cervical Spine. Cervicogenic Pain. Spondylosis: “degeneration”
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Common Problems of the Shoulder Part One Age >40
Shoulder Pain • Rule out Extrinsic Sources • Referred • Abdomen: subdiaphragmatic • Pulmonary disease: Pancoast tumor • Radicular • Cervical Spine
Cervicogenic Pain • Spondylosis: “degeneration” • Ache into shoulders • Pain reproduced with ROM • Radiculopathy (weakness) • C 4-5: 5 root, pain to shoulder, (deltoid) • C 5-6: 6 root, lat forearm, thumb (biceps, ECRL) • C 6-7: 7 root, middle finger (triceps) • C 7-8: 8 root, small finger (finger flexion) • C8-T1: T1 root, medial arm (finger abduction)
Common Diagnoses • Impingement • Rotator cuff tear • AC joint disease • Frozen shoulder • Rare: Glenohumeral arthritis, contusion, infection.
Shoulder Pain • Symptoms: • Pain overhead • Pain and weakness • Pain with anything • Duration of symptoms
Duration of Symptoms • If pain is acute (<12weeks), you can cure the patient with activity modification (no activity with elbow away from side), once a day stretch fully overhead, ice, and +/- NSAID or narcotic. • Pain > 12weeks is harder. • Pain > 6 months will need a miracle.
ImpingementThe most common diagnosis • Friction • Overuse--rare to get it in the history • Bursitis-->Tendinitis-->Rotator Cuff Tear
Impingement • Bursitis= pain but not when testing cuff • Tendinitis=hurts when cuff muscles are tested • Rotator cuff tear=weakness, frequently without pain
Impingement/BursitisPain with overhead activity • Pain felt at lateral shoulder • Pain at night • Can also be coming from the AC joint • EXAM: Impingement Sign vs AC joint tenderness and Cross Arm Adduction Test
TestsCross Arm Adduction(pain must be at AC joint, not posterior capsule)
AC Joint • Tenderness directly over joint. • Pain increased with adduction, overhead activity • Treat like arthritis anywhere else. • Injections are frequently helpful diagnostically and therapeutically.
Impingement Treatment • Activity modification: no activity with elbow away from side, in the gym, or at the computer. • Once a day stretch fully overhead. • NSAID and Ice • Injection in 3-6 wks prn. • Physical Therapy: After pain subsides: • Regain ROM, strengthen rotator cuff
Keeping shoulder healthy • Once pain subsides, start rotator cuff strengthening. • Continue cuff program at the gym and at home. • BOTH shoulders.
Pain and Weakness • Does this mean a Rotator Cuff Tear? • Can’t assess rotator cuff when there is pain • Treat pain first: NSAID, PT, ice, rest-4 wks • Cortisone shot (once) if above doesn’t work • Test cuff when pain subsides. • Refer after 6 weeks of treatment, not symptoms.
Rotator Cuff Tests • Best single test is External Rotation Strength (Infraspinatus and Teres Minor). • Can get extra credit testing Supraspinatus • Advanced placement if massive tear picked up testing Subscapularis (hand push off test with hand dorsum resting on low back)
Rotator Cuff Treatment • Cuff tear is rare in age<50. • Autopsy and MRI studies show most males over have RC tear and never had symptoms • Beware of the Repeat Injectee who has weakness. • Surgery decision is based on pain
Special Case: Rupture of long head of Biceps • Usually occurs without much trauma • Rupture of attrition (like a rope rubbing over a rock), remember long (lateral) head is intra-articular and part of the cuff. • Problem is the shoulder, not the tendon • Some supination power lost, not elbow flexion
Pain with Anything • Usually severe symptoms, not acute • Motion usually very restricted, passive and active (really can’t examine patient) • Frozen vs. “freezing” shoulder • PT, PT, PT (pain isn’t harmful) • Lots of support needed, injection might help.
Frozen Shoulder • Not an “-itis”, more like Dupuytrens contracture in the hand. • DDx: Shoulder joint infection (GH joint), Shoulder joint arthritis (DX with XR) • Best Dx test: no passive external rotation.
Frozen shoulder vs. Arthritis • Age • XR:
Shoulder Infection • Red, angry looking shoulder=septic arthritis of AC joint, not glenohumeral joint. • Aspirate point of maximal angriness (over superior AC joint), get labs, xray, and refer
Glenohumeral Joint Infection • Very rare • Increased incidence in diabetics, immuno-compromised patients. • Shoulder looks normal, just bigger. • SEVERE pain. Any motion hurts. • Often a fever. Get labs (CBC, blood cultures, ESR, CRP), XR, then: • Get a consult.
Who needs an Xray? • 1st visit, routine Hx/PE: No • No improvement after Tx: Yes • Odd Hx or PE, h/o fracture or injury: Yes • Pre-referral: Yes • Recommended XR: AP/outlet views
What about a MRI? • If it will change what you do, order it. • False positives • Helpful if cervical spine is bemuddling. • Some orthopedists like it prior to referral; doesn’t hurt to check for local customs.