Sports Medicine: Just the Facts

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45 ROTATOR CUFF PATHOLOGY


Patrick St Pierre, MD

HISTORY



  • John Gregory Smith published the first detailed series
    of rotator cuff ruptures, describing seven cases
    obtained by grave robbing, in a letter to the editor of
    the London Medical Gazette in 1834. Muller and
    Perthes were the first to perform repairs in the late
    1800s. Codman and later McLaughlin were pioneers
    in the early 1900s, describing their approach to the
    shoulder and detailing rotator cuff repair techniques
    that have been followed until today (Burkhead and
    Habermeyer, 1996).

  • In 1972, Charles Neer II (Neer, 1972) first proposed
    the phrase “Impingement Syndrome” for pain involv-
    ing the subacromial bursa and superior rotator cuff.
    He described the clinical presentation of the painful
    shoulder and proposed a mechanism for how the
    pathology developed. He noted that many of these
    patients had a hooked acromion and his hypothesis
    was that the bursa and rotator cuff were impinged
    between the humeral head and acromion with eleva-
    tion of the arm. This would usually start as mild
    inflammation of the tendon, would progress to fibro-
    sis and tendonitis, and eventually could lead to full
    thickness rotator cuff tear.


IMPINGEMENT OR ROTATOR CUFF
SYNDROME (NEER, 1972;1983)



  • Stage I, as described by Neer, included edema and
    hemorrhage in the tendon. Tendinosis of the
    supraspinatus and less frequently, the infraspinatus or
    subscapularis is involved.

  • Stage II, consisted of fibrosis and tendonitis in the
    subacromial space. This is a secondary process result-
    ing from the underlying etiology.

  • Stage III, resulted in the development of spurs and
    eventually tendon rupture.

  • The long head of the biceps tendon may also be
    involved with pathology ranging from inflammation
    to rupture (Crenshaw and Kilgore, 1966). Dislocation
    of the biceps tendon from the bicipital groove is
    pathognomonic for a tear of the upper border of the
    subscapularis muscle from its humeral insertion
    (Gerber, Hersche, and Farron, 1996; Gerber and
    Krushell, 1991).


•Pain will often occur along the anterior–lateral
acromion, in the infraspinatus fossa, or distally at the
deltoid insertion on the humerus. This pain is likely to
be referred pain from the inflamed bursa, which irri-
tates the deep deltoid. Pain referring proximally to the
neck usually originates from the acromioclavicular
(AC) joint (Chen, Rokito, and Zuckerman, 2003;
Valadie et al, 2000; Warner et al, 2001; Yocum, 1983).


  • There have been several other etiologies proposed for
    shoulder pain emanating from the subacromial space
    following Dr. Neer’s initial description (Jobe and
    Jobe, 1983; Jobe, Kvitne, and Giangarra, 1989; Walch
    et al, 1992). These different etiologies may or may not
    lead to actual impingement of the cuff by the
    acromion. Because multiple pathologies are often fac-
    tors in this condition, including tendinosis and bursi-
    tis, the best global term to describe this condition is
    Rotator Cuff Syndrome, reserving Impingement
    Syndrome for cases of true external impingement
    caused by AC arthritis or from the development of a
    coracoacromial(CA) ligament spur. Specific etiolo-
    gies, as discussed later, may also be used.


PATHOPHYSIOLOGY


  • Rotator cuff syndrome
    •Historically, patients will occasionally remember a
    direct blow or some other form of trauma. There
    may be history of a traction injury or a fall directly
    on a patient’s shoulder.
    •Overuse injury is also a frequent cause of this syn-
    drome. Patients will often not recall a specific
    injury, but may have carried luggage all weekend,
    cleaned out their attic, or worked on their car. Often
    the patient will be a weekend athlete who plays a
    full day of tennis, softball or other activity that they
    are not sufficiently trained for.

    • These conditions occur primarily because of injury
      to the rotator cuff causing tendinosis and rotator cuff
      dysfunction. The subacromial impingement occurs
      chronically with the development of subacromial
      spurs and superior humeral head migration due to
      lower rotator cuff inhibition or fatigue.



  • Secondary impingement: Subtle shoulder instability
    can lead to rotator cuff dysfunction and thus to rotator
    cuff syndrome. Jobe described this as secondary or
    internal impingement syndrome (Jobe and Jobe, 1983;
    Jobe, Kvitne, and Giangarra, 1989). This condition
    was originally noted in overhead throwing athletes, but
    should be suspected in all younger athletes who com-
    plain of impingement type pain. Treatment of this con-
    dition must address the underlying instability and not
    just the secondary pathology in the subacromial space.


268 SECTION 4 • MUSCULOSKELETAL PROBLEMS IN THE ATHLETE

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