Definition
- Mid-substance calcification of the rotator cuff as part of a metaplasia secondary to hypoxia
- Different condition to dystrophic calcification of a degenerate cuff which occurs at the cuff insertion
Aetiology
- Not due to impingement
- Uncertain
- HLA-A1
- Two theories
- Degenerate calcification theory
- Dystrophic calcification of degenerate cuff
- Necrotic fibrillated fibres act as nucleus for calcification
- Evidence against this theory as dystrophic calcification has different histology
- Degenerate cuff with true calcific tendonitis rare
- Reactive Hypoxic Calcification Theory
- Codman proposed cuff hypoxia as the causative factor
- Viable cells undergo metaplasia to fibrocartilaginous cells
- Fibrocartilage cells accumulate intracellular calcification
- Degenerate calcification theory
Epidemiology
- Peak 40 years
- Increased Risk
- Diabetes
Anatomy
Pathology
- 1. Pre-Calcific Stage
- Hypoxia → Fibrocartilaginous metaplasia of avascular cuff tenocytes
- Calcification accumulates in matrix vesicles
- extra-cellular matrix of
- Amorphous GAG rich debris
- Fragmented collagen fibres around viable chondrocytes
- extra-cellular matrix of
- Calcification is crystalline & noncrystalline
- Crystals may be in the form of
- Phosphates
- Carbonates
- Oxalates
- Hydroxyapatite
- Calcification as a hyperaemic area = “strawberry lesion”
- Calcium Granuloma forms
- AKA ” Psammoma”
- Macrophages
- Giant Cells
- AKA ” Psammoma”
- Increased intratendinous pressure
- Granulation tissue fills space left by Calcification
- Forms scar
Classification
Classification (Uhthoff)
Stage | Description |
---|---|
Pre-Calcific stage | Fibrocartilaginous Metaplasia |
Calcific Stage | ~No pain or chronic pain ~”Chalk” appearance ~Well-defined calcification on XR |
Formative Stage | |
Resting Phase | No pain or chronic pain |
Resorptive Stage | ~Acute pain ~”Toothpaste & quot ~Fluffy appearance on XR ~Macrophage resorption |
Post-Calcific Stage | Area heals to scar |
History
- Pain
- Usually acute pain due to calcification
- Acute pain in Resorption phase on background of Absent to mild chronic pain of the Formative Stage
- No impingement
Examination
- Feel
- Tender
- Move
- Painful ROM
- ↓ ROM
Investigations
XRay
- Calcification typically Supraspinatus mid-cuff
- Two appearances
- Painful Resorptive (Type 1)
- Fluffy
- Poorly defined margin
- Irregular density
- Can rupture into bursa
- Chronic Formative (Type 2)
- Discrete, homogenous deposit
- Well defined margin
- Uniform density
- Degenerative changes extremely rare with true calcific tendonitis
- Different appearance to dystrophic calcification secondary to a cuff tendinopathy
Ultrasound
- more sensitive than XR
- ~ 100%
Differential Diagnosis
- Cuff Tendinopathy
- Brachial Neuritis
- Septic Shoulder
- Biceps Tendinopathy
- Gout/ CPPD
- IHD
Treatment
Principles
- Distinguish Formative vs Resorptive
- Formative Management
- Typically Non-Operative
- Formative Management
Nonoperative
- Education
- Medications
- Cortisone not recommended
- Physiotherapy
- to maintain ROM
- ? USS
- Injections
- HCLA if concomitant impingement
Operative
- If above fails surgery may be needed
- Technique (Open)
- Deltoid split
- Split fibres longitudinally
- Scoop out Calcification
- May need II
- Repair cuff
- Acromioplasty if cuff tight