shoulder surgery and rehab handout 2012

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16/12/2012 1 Lennard Funk Shoulder Surgeon, Wrigh3ngton Hospital Professor, Salford University Accelerated ehab a3onale R

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Page 1: Shoulder surgery and rehab handout 2012

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Lennard  Funk  Shoulder  Surgeon,  Wrigh3ngton  Hospital  

Professor,  Salford  University  

Accelerated    

ehab  a3onale  R

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So  why  need  Physio?  

ACJ  Arthri3s:  

Surgery  &  Physio  

•  Shoulder  comprises:  5  ar3cula3ons  and  numerous  muscles,  tendons  and  ligaments.  

•  Injury  to  any  one  of  these  effects  the  others.  

This  is  where  Physiotherapy  comes  in.  

Shoulder  Surgery  Outcomes  

Patient

Therapist

Surgeon

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Need...  •  Surgeons  should  understand  Rehab  

•  Physios  should  understand  Surgery  

Aims  of  Shoulder  Surgery  

1.  Pain  Relief  –  Decompression  –  Removing  worn  joint  (ACJ)  –  Replacing  worn  joint  

(Shoulder  replacement)  

2.  Restore  Func3on  

–  Stabilising  loose  joint  

–  Glenohumeral  Instability  

–  ACJ  Disloca3ons  

–  Releasing  3ght  joint  

–  MUA  

–  Capsular  Release  

Common  Shoulder  Procedures  

1.  ASD  +/-­‐  ACJ  Excision   Impingement  +/-­‐  ACJ  OA  

2.  Rotator  Cuff  Repair   Rotator  Cuff  Tear  

3.  Shoulder  Replacement   Shoulder  Arthri3s  

4.  Bankart  repair   Recurrent  Disloca3ons  

5.  MUA   Frozen  Shoulder  

6.  Proximal  humerus  fracture  fixa3on   Proximal  humeral  fractures  

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Subacromial  Decompression  

ACJ  Excision  

Open  Subacromial  Decomp.  /  ACJ  Excision  

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Open  Subacromial  Decomp.  /  ACJ  Excision  

REHAB:  

•  Protect  reabached  Deltoid  &  Deltotrapezial  fascia:  

–  Immobilise  for  at  least  3  weeks.  

–  Avoid  Deltoid  resistance  exercises  for  at  least  6  weeks.  

•  Surgical  wound  with  sutures  removed  at  two  weeks  

•  Haematoma  care  &  bruising  

ASD  /  ACJ  Excision  

Scope Shaver

ASD / ACJ Excision REHAB:  •  No  detached  muscles  to  protect  •  Commence  ac3ve  movement  and  discard  sling  as  soon  as  possible  –  day  1  or  2  post-­‐op.  •  No  sutures  /  wound  complica3ons  

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Sod  Tissue  Repairs  

•  Rotator  Cuff  •  Labral  /  Stabilisa3on  /  SLAP  •  Pec  Major  •  Tendon  Transfers  

Goals  

•  Protect  the  integrity  of  the  rotator  cuff  repair    •  Minimize  postopera3ve  pain  and  inflammafon    •  Restore  passive  range  of  mo3on    •  Restore  strength  and  dynamic  stability  of  the  shoulder    •  Restore  ac3ve  range  of  mo3on    •  Return  to  func3onal/spor3ng  ac3vi3es  

Tendon  Healing  

•  Tendon  –  bone  healing:  

– 50%  at  3  weeks  

– 90%  at  6  weeks  

"   Affected  by:  

"   Tissue  &  muscle  quality  

"   Quality  of  repair  

"   Smoking  

"   NSAIDs  

"   Loading  condi3ons  

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Factors  affec3ng  rehab  

•  Tissue  integrity  •  Size  of  repair  •  Loca3on  of  tear  •  Tension  of  repair  •  Tendon  to  bone  healing  •  Pain    

effects  of  immobilisa3on  

Tendon  loading  

•  Immobilisa0on:  

•  Decr.  Tendon  weight  

•  Decr.  S3ffness  &  tensile  strength  

•  Irregular  collagen  fibres  

•  Type  3  >  Type  1  collagen  

•  Degenera3ve  changes  

Mehta. Clin J Sports Med. 2003

Exercise:    Incr.  Growth  Factors  Incr.  tensile  strength  Incr.  cross-­‐sec3onal  area  Realign  collagen  Type  1  >  Type  3  collagen    

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Repair  Strength  

•  Anchors  •  Sutures  •  Synthe3c  Ligament  Grads  

High-­‐Strength  Sutures  

Suture-­‐Anchors  

•  Materials  – Biodegradable  – PEEK  

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Rotator  Cuff  Repair  

Rotator  Cuff  Tears  •  Open  Surgery   •  Arthroscopic •  Open

Single  vs  Double  Row  

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Releases

Important    to  perform  complete  releases  of:  •  all  adhesions    •  Coracoacromial  Lig  •  Coracohumeral  Lig  •  Posterior  bursa  •  Anterior  bursa  

Rotator  Cuff  Repair  Rehab  

REHAB:  •  Protect  Repair    un3l  healed  •  Early  Mobilisa3on  

•  Depends  on  size  of  tear  and  cuff  quality.  

Be  Aware:  •  Elderly  •  Smoker  •  Faby  Infiltra3on  of  Muscle  •  Quality  of  Tendon  at  Surgery  •  Size  of  Tear  

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Muscle  Atrophy    &  Faby  Infiltra3on  

Stabilisa3on  Surgery  

Lesions  

•  Bankart  – Sod  Tissue  – Bony  – ALPSA  

•  Capsular  Stretch  •  HAGL  

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Bankart  

Bony  Bankart  

ALPSA  -­‐  Displaced  Bankart  

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Beware  the  HAGL!  

Key  points:  •  Full  mobilisa3on  

•  Prepara3on  

–  Labrum  

–  Glenoid  

•  Shid  

•  Solid  Fix  

HAGL  

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Hill-­‐Sachs  -­‐  Remplissage  

Latarjet  Procedure  •  Glenoid  Bone  Loss  

Safe  Zone  

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Phase  &  Sport  Specific  Rehab  "  Phase 1: (Level 1 Exercises)

"  Core stability & Scapula control

"  Proprioceptive exercises (minimal weightbearing below 90 degrees)

"  Active assisted ROM as comfortable (in 'safe zone' )

"  Do not force or stretch

"  No combined abduction & external rotation

"  Phase 2: (Level 2 Exercises)

"  Progress active assisted to active ROM as comfortable

"  Phase 3: (Level 3+ Exercises)

"  Regain scapula & glenohumeral stability working for shoulder joint control rather than range

"  Gradually Strengthen

"  Plyometrics and pertubation training

Rehab  •  Based  on  maintaining  safe  range  of  movement  in  the  

first  phase  and  then  gradually  building  strength  in  the  middle  to  the  last  phase.    

•  Pre-­‐op:  

–  ROM  Exercises  

– Maximise  shoulder  strength  of  deltoid,  intact  cuff  muscles  and  scapula  stabilisers.  

<  3  weeks  -­‐  Level  1  

•  Passive  /  Ac3ve  Assisted  ROM  in  all  direc3ons  as  tolerated    

•  Shoulder  girdle  exercises  &  Scapula  sefng  exercises    

•  Closed  chain  exercise    

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Level  1  <  20%  EMG  

3-­‐6wks  -­‐  Level  2-­‐3  

•  Wean  off  Sling  

•  Do  not  force  or  stretch    

•  Isometric  exercises  in  neutral  as  pain  allows  –  up  to  50%  maximum  voluntary  contrac3on    

•  Open  Chain  Exercises  as  tolerated  

Level  2  20-­‐40%  EMG  

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6+  weeks  =  Level  3+  

•  Progress  to  full  ac3ve  and  resistance  exercises  in  all  ranges      

6+  weeks  

Shoulder  classes  

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Athletes  Phase  1  

Phase  2  

Phase  2  

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Phase  2  

Phase  3  

Phase  3  

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Phase  4  

Phase  5  

ACJ  Reconstruc3on  

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Coracoclavicular    Ligaments  

•  Strength  –  500N  (+/-­‐  134)  •  S3ffness  –  103N/mm  (+/-­‐  30)  •  Uniaxial  Tension  25mm/min  

Harris et. al. Am J Sports Med. 2000

Harris  et  al.  AJSM  2000  

“None  of  the  reconstruc3on  techniques  analyzed  in  the  present  study  were  able  to  restore  the  normal  mechanical  func3on  of  the  intact  coracoclavicular  ligament  complex”  

Func3onal  Anatomy  

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CC  Lig  Posi3ons  

CA  Ligament  Transfer  (Weaver-­‐Dunn)  

•  20%  loss  of  reduc3on  

•  20%  of  CC  Lig  strength  

•  Immobilisa3on  

1. Weinstein DM, McCann PD, McIlveen SJ, Flatow EL, Bigliani LU. Surgical treatment of complete acromioclavicular dislocations. Am J Sports Med 1995;23:324-31 2. Deshmukh AV, Wilson DR, Zilberfarb JL, Perlmutter GS. Stability of acromioclavicular joint reconstruction: biomechanical testing of various surgical techniques in a cadaveric model. Am J Sports Med 2004;32:1492-8. 3. Grutter PW, Petersen SA. Anatomical acromioclavicular ligament reconstruction: a biomechanical comparison of reconstructive techniques of the acromioclavicular joint. Am J Sports Med 2005;33:1723-8.

CC  Lig  Reconstruc3on  

Hamstrings   Donor  site  morbidity  

Allograd   Access;  cost;  Prion  risk  

Synthe3cs   Non-­‐biological  3ssue  

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LARS  Ligament  (Corin)  

•  Braided  Polyester  •  1500N  tensile  strength  (30  LAC)  •  No  reduc3on  in  mechanical  resilience  ader  over  10  million  wear  cycles  loaded  in  torsion,  trac3on  and  flexion  

•  Vascularisa3on  &  Fibrous  ingrowth  -­‐  Collagen  Type  1    

Incision  

Shoulderdoc.co.uk

Nofngham  Approach  

Shoulderdoc.co.uk

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Standard  repair  

Shoulderdoc.co.uk

Modifica3on  1  

Shoulderdoc.co.uk

Modifica3on  2  

Shoulderdoc.co.uk

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Closure  

•  Repair  the  Superior  AC  Ligaments  •  Repair  the  Delto-­‐Trapezial  Fascia  

3  weeks  post-­‐op  

Shoulder  Replacement  

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Shoulder  Replacement  -­‐  Points  

•  Subscapularis  divided  

Shoulder  Replacement  Post-­‐Op  

•  Sling  for  TWO  DAYS  

•  SIX  WEEKS  Avoid:  –   Passive  External  Rota3on  – Ac3ve  Internal  Rota3on  

Shoulder  Replacement  –  Capsule    

•  Capsule  is  released  at  surgery  circumferen3ally  to  improve  ROM  post-­‐op  

•  -­‐>  Early  ROM  to  prevent  S3ffness.  

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Summary  

•  Understand  the  Procedure  •  Muscles  cut/detached  -­‐  protect  •  Safe  ROM  for  repair  •  Avoid  Stretching  and  Forcing  •  Communicate  with  Surgeon  

[email protected]

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