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Non-Operative Management of Orthopaedic Issues. Reza Omid, M.D. Assistant Professor Orthopaedic Surgery Shoulder & Elbow Reconstruction Sports Medicine Keck School of Medicine of USC. Musculoskeletal Injuries. Common cause for doctor visists (ER and outpatient).
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Non-Operative Management of Orthopaedic Issues Reza Omid, M.D. Assistant Professor Orthopaedic Surgery Shoulder & Elbow Reconstruction Sports Medicine Keck School of Medicine of USC
Musculoskeletal Injuries • Common cause for doctor visists (ER and outpatient). • >1 in 4 Americans has a musculoskeletal condition requiring medical attention. • Most can be treated non-operatively
X-rays • Consider x-ray for any patient with injury • Fracture/Dislocation/Infection/Tumor
General Orthopaedics • Shoulder/Elbow Reconstruction • Trauma • Pediatrics • Hand/Wrist • Foot/Ankle • Hip/Knee Reconstruction • Tumor • Sports Medicine • Spine
Differential Dx • Rotator Cuff Disease • Frozen shoulder • Fracture • Calcific Tendonitis • Labral Tears • Biceps Pathology
Shoulder Pain • Among the most common sources of pain • Ranks 2nd to lower back pain as a reason pt. seek medical attention • Approx. 40% of people over 65 yo have rotator cuff tears!
Shoulder Pain • Rotator Cuff Disorders • 17 million individuals in US at risk • 600,000 surgeries / year • Most common source WC shoulder pain
Rotator Cuff Anatomy • Supraspinatus • Infraspinatus • Tere Minor • Subscapularis
Rotator Cuff Disease • Intrinsic Factors • Age related degeneration • Extrinsic Factors • Acromial shape • Mechanical pressure on cuff • Activity
Conclusions • Demographics • Unilateral tear in young • Bilateral tear in older • Tears rare before 50 yo. • >50% in pt over 66 yo.
Radiographs • Always obtain first • AP (scapular plane) • Axillary lateral • Supraspinatus outlet
History • Pain (especially night pain) • Radiates around deltoid • Never below elbow • Weakness • Difficulty reaching overhead or behind • Cannot sleep on affected side
Physical Examination • Cervical spine • Shoulder ROM (active/passive) symmetric?
Physical Examination • Rotator cuff tests • TDA (supraspinatus) • ER at side (infraspinatus) • ER 90° abd (teres minor) • Lift-off (subscapularis)
Physical Examination • Normal Motion • Elevation – 160 • Abduction ER – 90 • ER @ side -60 • IR/Ext – T7
Adjuvant Imaging Modalities • MRI • Ultrasound • CT Arthrogram
MRI Reads • Labral tears • AC arthritis • Partial thickness RC tears • Full thickness RC tears
MRI Results • Arthritis: • Labral tears • AC arthritis • Partial thickness tears • Tendinosis • Rotator Cuff Dz: • Full thickness tears • High grade partial thickness tears
MRI Read • No RC Tear • Labral tear seen • AC joint arthritis seen • Dx: Shoulder arthritis
Partial Rotator Cuff Tears • Can initially treat conservatively • If fails conservative treatment then surgery
Orthopaedic Referral • Full thickness tear in patients <60-65yo • Acute (<3month) traumatic full thickness tears in any age • Full thickness tear in patients >65 yrs who fail conservative treatment
Rotator Cuff Tear • Risks - Chronic Changes • retraction with adhesion • tendon morphology • muscle atrophy • fatty degeneration • degenerative changes
Conservative Treatment • Rest, Activity modification • NSAIDS • ROM stretching • Cuff/Periscapular strengthening • Corticosteroid Injections
Conservative TreatmentInjections • Elderly (>65yo) • Partial tears
Shoulder Injections • “The effect of corticosteroid on collagen expression in injured rotator cuff tendon” • Wei A, et al JBJSAm 2006: 1331-8 • LIMIT TO 1-2 INJECTION • GET MRI PRIOR
Proximal Biceps Rupture • Suspect RC Tear
Shoulder Dislocation • If anyone >40 years dislocates get an MRI • If full thickness tear seen with healthy muscle bellies then surgery is indicated
Frozen Shoulder • Global and significant loss of both active and passive ROM in gradual fashion • Absence of radiographic findings other than osteopenia
Clinical Presentation • Age: late middle age (40-60) • Male < Female • Diabetic and Hypothyroid
Clinical Presentation • Significant pain - especially at night! • Insidious onset • No trauma • Minor trauma (“dog pulled me”, “I reached in the back seat of the car”)
Late Frozen Shoulder • Significant loss of ROM • active and passive
Physical Exam • Passive ROM restricted • ER early • global late • ER < 50% unaffected side (pathognomic) • Pain with extremes of ER
Treatment • Conservative • NSAID’s • Physical Therapy Fluoro-Guided Intraarticular Steroid Injection!
Accuracy of glenohumeral joint injections: comparing approach and experience of provider. • Tobola JSES 2011:1147 • Posterior: 50% • Anterior: 42%
Arthroscopic Release • Surgical release of contractures • Remove scar tissue • Complete motion
Differential Dx • Lateral Epicondylitis • Instability • Biceps Pathology • Medial Epicondylitis • Olecranon Bursitis • Fracture
Presentation • Lateral elbow pain with grip • Especially in extension • TTP at lateral epicondyle
Conservative Treatment • NSAIDs • Activity modification • Physical therapy • Counterforce brace • Iontophoresis • Injections
Injections • Corticosteroids • Platelet Rich Plasma • Botulinum Toxin A
Posterolateral rotatory instability of the elbow in association with lateral epicondylitis. A report of three cases. Kalainov JBJSAm 2005: 1120