Rotator Cuff Tears

Rotator Cuff

Aetiology

  • The pathogenesis is multifactorial
  • Two major theories
    • 1. Extrinsic
    • 2. Intrinsic
  • Extrinsic Theories (Structural)
    • Based on the theory that impingement is due to loss of subacromial space (normal = 1-1.5cm)
    • Leads to mechanical wear and degeneration of the supraspinatus tendon
    • Subacromial space narrowed by several causes – there is relationship between the shape of the acromion and the rotator cuff pathology
      • Bigliani et al in 1986
        • Divided into 3 types of morphology by looking at 140 cadavers
          • Type 1 flat
          • Type 2 curved
          • Type 3 anterior hook
        • 75% of the patients with complete rotator cuff tears had Type 3 Acromions
    • Other causes of narrowing of the subacromial space include
      • 1. Anterior acromial spur formation
      • 2. ACJ arthritis with underlying osteophyte
      • 3. Prominent greater tuberosity
      • 4. Loss of functional muscle depressors of the humeral head
      • 5. Loss of glenohumeral fulcrum (capsular laxity or glenoid or humeral bone loss)
      • 6. Nonunion or malunion of acromion
      • 7. Ununited mesacromial epiphysis
  • Intrinsic Theories (Vascular Watershed)
    • The vascularity of the rotator cuff tendons has been studied at length
    • Most authors (Ling 1990, Lindholm 1933, Moseley 1963) have demonstrated an avascular area in distal part of the supraspinatus tendon just proximal to insertion in the greater tuberosity
    • Represents anastomosis of vessels derived from muscle and those derived from bone
    • Codman coined this area the “Critical Zone”
    • The contact area between the critical zone and Coracoacromial arch increases from 4.77cm2 in 45° of abduction to 7.08cm2 at 90° of abduction
    • Most impingement occurs at the anterior edge of the acromion
    • Microtrauma occurs with repetitive activities (ie. overhead sports such as throwing)
    • Development of myxoid degeneration and tendonopathy (cf. Archilles tendinopathy and lateral epicondylitis in this age group ie. > 40 years)
  • Probably a combination of both theories

Epidemiology

  • Common problem in middle aged and elderly patients – male > female
  • Increased incidence with overhead work and age > 60 years
  • Throwing sports are associated with rotator cuff disease
  • Bigliani & colleagues
    • 140 shoulders in 71 cadavers with average age 74.4 years
    • Identified three types of acromion
    • Type 1 (flat) 17%
    • Type 2 (curved) 43%
    • Type 3 (hooked) 40%
    • 58% had same type of acromion on each side
  • Incidence of tears
    • Full thickness tears 33%
      • Of which
        • 73% in Type 3 acromion
        • 24% in Type 2 acromion
        • 3% in Type 1 acromion

Anatomy

  • 1. Subscapularis
    • Arises from the medial 4/5 of the costal surface of the scapula, from intermuscular septa which raise bony ridges on this surface and from the concave border of the scapula up to infraglenoid tubercle
    • Inserts into the lesser tuberosity of the humerus and the medial lip of the intertubercular groove for 2cm below
    • Supplied by the Upper and Lower Subscapular Nerve (C6, C7)
    • Acts primarily as internal rotator of humerus and acts with other rotator cuff muscles to stabilize the shoulder
  • 2. Supraspinatus
    • Arises from whole of the supraspinous fossa and upper surface of the scapular spine
    • Bipennate in shape
    • Inserts into the smooth part of upper facet of greater tuberosity
    • Supplied by the Suprascapular Nerve (C5, C6)
    • Main action is humeral head stabilizer – Humeral head compressor
    • Contributes to humeral head abduction with Deltoid
  • 3. Infraspinatus
    • Arises from beneath deep fascia from medial 3/4 of the infraspinous fossa
    • Fibrous intramuscular septa allow further attachment of Multipennate fibres
    • Inserted into smooth area on the middle facet of the greater tuberosity
    • Supplied by the Suprascapular Nerve (C5, C6)
    • Primary action is external rotator of the humerus
    • Also acts with rest of the cuff in stabilizing the G-H joint
  • 4. Teres Minor
    • Completely hidden beneath the deltoid
    • Arises from elongated oval area at axillary border of the scapula and inserts into the lower facet of the greater tuberosity
    • Supplied by the posterior branch of the Axillary Nerve (C5, C6)
    • Primary action as external rotator and adductor of the humerus
    • Acts with other cuff muscles to stabilize the joint
  • Coracoacromial arch
    • The Coracoacromial arch functions as an additional articular surface of the shoulder joint during abduction and forward flexion
    • It consists of
      • 1. Coracoid Process
      • 2. Acromion Process
      • 3. Coracoacromial ligament
  • Subacromial bursa
    • large bursa lying under the coracoacromial ligament to which the upper layer is attached
    • The lower layer is attached to the tendon of supraspinatus
    • Extends beyond the lateral border of acromion with the arm by the side but rolled inwards under the acromion when arm abducted
  • Coracohumeral ligament
    • strong ligament that runs from the undersurface of the coracoid laterally across the capsule, to which it is attached at the margin of the greater tuberosity and along the transverse ligament
    • 2 bands
      • One inserts into the tendinous anterior band of supraspinatus and greater tuberosity
      • Second inserts into the superior border of subscapularis, transverse ligament and lesser tuberosity
      • Superficial to shoulder capsule and overlies biceps tendon
  • Biceps
    • Long head of Biceps Tendon crosses the rotator cuff in the rotator interval between the Supraspinatus and Subscapularis muscles
    • It enters the intertubercular groove where it is held down by the Transverse ligament
  • Rotator Interval
    • Lies between supraspinatus and subscapularis
    • Within the interval lies
      • Coracohumeral ligament (superficial)
      • SGHL (deep)

Pathology

Classification

  • 1. Impingement
    • Neer classifies into three broad groups
      • Stage I
        • Reversible
          • Oedema & Haemorrhage
          • < 25 years
      • Stage II
        • Irreversible change
          • Fibrosis & Tendonitis
          • 25-40 years
        • Subdivided by Gartsmen
          • Stage IIA
            • No tear
          • Stage IIB
            • Partial thickness tears
          • Stage III
            • Chronic
            • Partial & Full thickness tears
            • > 40 years
  • 2. Rotator cuff tears
    • Neer divided into three groups
      • Group 1
        • Traumatic Tears
          • < 5% of 340 cases
          • < 40 years of age and result of microtrauma from overhead sports
      • Group 2
        • Tears with dislocations
        • Anterior dislocation
        • > 40 years and in rotator interval
        • Multidirectional instability
        • Cleft tear of rotator interval
        • Extreme violence at any age with large cuff tear maybe associated nerve injury
      • Group 3
      • Impingement tears
      • > 40 years
      • 50% no history of injury
    • Partial vs Full thickness
      • 1. Partial thickness – joint side > bursal
        • Bursal side
        • Joint side
        • Intrasubstance
      • 2. Full thickness
        • Small < 1cm
        • Medium 1-3cm
        • Large 3-5cm
        • Massive > 5cm
  • 3. Cuff Arthropathy
  • 4. Calcific Tendonitis
  • 5. Biceps tendonitis
  • The first three represent spectrum of disease and often present together

History

  • Pain
    • predominant symptom of impingement
    • Anterior aspect of acromion and coracoacromial ligament area
    • Can radiate down arm into elbow, medially into chest wall or into trapezius
    • Pain usually associated with overhead activities (reaching into cupboard, hanging clothes, etc)
    • Tennis, swimming make it worse
    • Cannot sleep on affected shoulder
  • weakness
  • loss of motion

Examination

  • Tenderness
    • over anterolateral edge of acromion or biceps tendon (faces anteriorly at 5-10° of IR)
  • Movement
    • Painful arc from 70-120°
  • Impingement sign
    • Passively elevating the arm in plane of scapular and reinforced by internal rotation of the arm (ie. Hawkin’s + Neer’s)
    • Neer’s Impingement Sign
    • Stabilize scapular and passively abduct in plane of scapular (30° to coronal plane)
    • pain
    • Hawkin’s Impingement Sign
      • Forward flexion to 90° with IR
      • pain
  • Bicipital tendonitis/ subluxation
    • Speed’s test
      • Resisted elevation of supinated forearm
        • pain
    • Yerguson’s test
      • Resisted supination with shoulder adducted
      • click or pop with pain
  • AC joint pathology
    • Painful if forced cross arm adduction or IR of the extended arm
  • Weakness of rotator cuff muscles
    • Subscapularis
      • Gerber’s lift-off or Napoleon’s
    • Supraspinatus
      • test in abduction with thumb down & feel contraction + test power
    • External rotators (IS and TM)
      • ER in adduction
    • Teres minor
      • Hornblowers (ER at 90° abduction)
  • Instability
    • Apprehension and Jobe relocation test if instability considered

Investigations

Neer Impingement Test

  • HCLA into subacromial bursa makes previously positive impingement sign negative

Xray

  • AP view of GHJ
    • Acromial-Humeral Index
      • Normal 1-1.5cm
      • < 5mm indicates major rotator cuff tear
    • Sclerosis Greater Tuberosity
    • Acromion Spur & Sclerosis
    • Calcification with IR/ ER views
    • ACJ OA
    • Broken Shenton’s Line of the shoulder
  • Axillary view
    • Os acromionale
  • Other views
  • Supraspinatus outlet view for acromion morphology (10° caudal lateral scapular view)
  • ACJ views (10° cephalad view in AP)
  • Subacromial spurring (30° caudal tilt view)

Ultrasound

  • Non-invasive, cheap, dynamic and anatomic
  • Examination of both sides of cuff
  • Sensitivity and specificity high (85%)
  • USS often unable to differentiate partial and full thickness tears (this has improved)

MRI

  • MRI has sensitivity of 100% and specificity of 95%
  • Can detect partial thickness tears more easily
  • Exclude other causes of shoulder pain
    • Labral tears
    • AVN
    • Tumour
    • Expensive

Differential Diagnosis

  • Shoulder instability (esp younger patient)
  • GHJ and ACJ OA
  • Calcific tendonitis
  • Frozen shoulder
  • SLAP lesion
  • Unrecognised Os acromionale (unfused after 25 years)
  • Infection
  • Tumour
  • Nerve injury – Suprascapular/ Axillary Nerve
  • Cervical spine disease
  • Mediastinal pathology
  • Cardiac ischaemia

Treatment

Non-operative

  • Can manage partial thickness tears non-op
  • Change of activity
  • Physiotherapy
  • NSAID
  • Steroid injections

Operative

  • Small and medium tears – best result with acromioplasty and repair
  • A water-tight seal that restores function and excludes synovial fluid is best
  • Large and massive tears controversial
    • Options
      • Cuff debridement
      • Mobilisation of cuff
      • McLaughlin repair
      • Interposition graft eg ITB
      • Local tendon transfer eg biceps
      • Distal tendon transfer
  • Cuff debridement
    • Reserved for the older patient with impingement symptoms without significant problems with weakness
  • Mobilisation
    • Mobilise the cuff
    • Mobilise the subdeltoid region/ bursa by sweeping under the acromion
    • Release the coracohumeral ligament on the coracoid side using Mayo scissors
    • Circumferential release of the attachment to glenoid rim
    • 2cm release of subscapularis and infraspinatus and mobilise
    • > 1cm advancement of the supraspinatus may injure the suprascapular nerve
    • Consider medialisation of the insertion at the humeral head
    • If unable to repair after mobilisation then consider
      • Debride and acromioplasty
      • Attempt indirect repair
  • McLaughlin V-Y repair
    • Resect crescentic tear to give an inverted isosceles triangle
    • Apply shoelace suture to bring edges of cuff together
    • Tie-down to drill holes in greater tuberosity
    • Repair in the shape of an “L”
  • Biceps tendon in repair
  • Split pectoralis major transfer for reconstruction of irreparable subscapularis tear
    • Sternal portion of pect maj dissected and divided at insertion with preservation of clavicular portion
    • Pass sternal portion under clavicular portion and attach to lesser tuberosity
  • Latissimus Dorsi transfer for reconstruction of irreparable posterosuperior tear
    • Patient in lateral decubitus
    • Dissect lateral dorsi to nv bundle and detach at its insertion
    • Transfer under deltoid and acromion and attach to greater tuberosity
    • Repair with arm in abduction
  • Free graft (coracoacromial ligament, fascia lata, freeze dried rotator cuff)
    • Synthetic graft material
    • Massive tears that are unable to be closed
    • Good results if
    • “Balanced force couples”
    • Both tear edges above the equator of the head à force couples equalized
    • Reattach coracoacromial ligament

Postoperative Rehabilitation

  • Arm in shoulder immobilizer for 2-3 weeks
  • Arm in abduction splint only if repair tight & tissues poor
  • Hand & elbow exercises from day 1
  • Passive ROM exercises within limits of repair after 1/52
  • Active assisted & isometric exercises after 3/52
  • Active elevation after 6/52
  • Light activities after 8/52
  • Return to sport after 4/12

Results

  • Satisfactory outcome in 60-80% after repair
  • Decompression alone lead to 50-68% good, but later failure
  • Improvement continues for up to 2 years

Prognosis

  • Poorer with
    • Large tear
    • Neglected tear
    • Older patient (> 60)
    • Unrecognised ACJ OA
    • Poor subacromial decompression
    • Damage to deltoid
    • Excessive acromionectomy
    • Improper rehabilitation
  • Repeat tear likely with
    • Massive tear
    • Poor quality tendon
    • Poor repair
    • Persistent impingement
    • Poor rehabilitation
    • Smokers & DM

Complications

  • Cuff Arthropathy/ Milwaukee Shoulder
    • Collapse of humeral articular surface
    • In association with massive cuff tear
    • & HA crystal arthropathy
    • Seen in 5% of patients with massive tear
    • Result of rubbing of uncovered & upwardly displaced humeral head on undersurface of coracoacromial arch
    • Loss of articular surface of humeral head
    • Leads to destruction of glenoid surface
  • Re-rupture
  • Pain & Failure
  • Stiffness
  • Deltoid avulsion