ACJ Arthritis

Summary

  • Osteoarthritis of the Acromioclavicular Joint
  • The AC joint can become a source of pain in the shoulder, because of:
    • degenerative osteoarthritis,
    • posttraumatic arthritis,
    • distal clavicle osteolysis.
  • Diagnosis
    • Pain on palpation,
    • reproduction of pain with cross-body adduction
    • diagnostic injections
    • Plain radiographs
      • Zanca view,
  • Treatment
    • Nonoperative management
      • can be successful,
    • Operative
      • distal clavicle resection

Aetiology

  • idiopathic
    • elderly
      • Degenerative osteoarthritis is more common with advanced age
      • AC joint arthritis is much less common than hip, knee, or glenohumeral arthritis
  • trauma
    • young
      • Posttraumatic arthritis is a more common cause than primary osteoarthritis
  • Distal clavicle osteolysis
    • less-common cause, occurs in certain power athletes (e.g., weight-lifters).

Epidemiology

Anatomy

  • The AC joint is a hyaline cartilage joint with a fibrocartilage meniscal disc.

Pathology

  • Disc starts to break down with normal aging and, by early adulthood, is minimal
  • Disc may be injured with an AC separation or with repetitive activity

Classification

4 patterns

  1. DJD with osteophytes > contribute to impingement
  2. Osteolysis with resorption & gross osteoporosis
    • due to repetetive microtrauma (eg weight lifters)
  3. RA
  4. Hyperparathyroidism

History

  • Pain:
    • anterosuperior shoulder pain
    • worse with activities that load the joint (reaching across shoulder, behind body, bench-press)
    • Night pain: difficulty sleeping on affected side
    • pain radiates to trapezius > spasm

Examination

  • Direct Palpation
    • Tenderness to direct palpation
      • is most reliable sign
    • may feel osteophytes
  • Provacative tests
    • horizontal adduction of arm (tends to overlap with impingement)
    • max IR of shoulder (more sensitive & specific)
  • Injection of local anaesthetic
    • useful

Investigations

XRay

  • AP Shoulder
    • neutral
    • IR
    • ER (true AP)
  • AP with 10° cephalic tilt with 1/3 penetration [zanca view]
    • best for AC joint
  • Look for
    • sclerois
    • subchondral cysts
    • joint space narrowing
    • osteophyte formation
    • bone loss at distal clavicle (osteolysis)

Bone Scan

  • increased uptake in joint

MRI

  • very helpful
  • can be difficult to determine signal because of Normal age related changes

Lignocaine Injection

Differential Diagnosis

  • Intrinsic
    • Rotator Cuff Impingement
    • Calcific tendinitis
    • Frozen shoulder
    • Glenohumeral arthritis
    • ACJ gout
    • ACJ sepsis
  • Extrinsic
    • Cervical root C4/5
    • Shoulder tip pain from abdominal pathology

Treatment

Principles

  • Most can be treated nonoperatively

Nonoperative

  • most respond to Non-operative managment
    • NSAIDs
    • Activity modification
      • Limitation of exacerbating activities such as bench-presses, dips, push-ups, and overhead activities
    • Steroid injection
    • Physiotherapy: minimal role
  • consider operative management after 6 months

Operative

  • Indication
    • if fail nonoperative management
  • 90% success rate
  • resect 1cm – 2cm (to prevent continued bony contact between the clavicle and acromion)
  • Options
    • Open resection
    • Arthroscopic
      • preserves AC capsule
      • quicker rehabilitation
  • Complications
    • incomplete resection
    • continued pain after surgery
    • excessive resection leading to distal clavicle instability

Prognosis