1 / 26

Rehab of the Unstable Shoulder

Rehab of the Unstable Shoulder. Chris Sawyer, PT Children’s Mercy Hospital. Epidemiology. Shoulder is a joint evolved for mobility Instability is usually defined as a clinical syndrome that occurs when laxity produces symptoms

lorna
Télécharger la présentation

Rehab of the Unstable Shoulder

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rehab of the Unstable Shoulder Chris Sawyer, PT Children’s Mercy Hospital

  2. Epidemiology • Shoulder is a joint evolved for mobility • Instability is usually defined as a clinical syndrome that occurs when laxity produces symptoms • Dislocation & subluxation of GH joint occurs relatively frequently in athletes

  3. Epidemiology • Rowe found a bimodal distribution of shoulder dislocation with peaks in the 2nd and 6th decades with 98% of those cases being anterior dislocations • Hovelius found traumatic injury to be the most common cause of shoulder instability, accounting for 95% of anterior dislocations

  4. Epidemiology • Rowe found that 70% of those that experience a dislocation can expect a recurrent dislocation within 2 years of the initial injury • Recurrence is highly age-dependent • In patients younger than 20 years of age, recurrent dislocations rates have been reported as high as 90% in the athletic population

  5. Anatomical Considerations

  6. Anatomical Considerations Middle glenohumeral ligament • Primarily effective at 45° abduction • Helps limit external rotation, inferior and anterior humeral tranlsation. Superior glenohumeral ligament • Plays minor role in preventing anterior instability • Primarily limits inferior translation and external rotation of the adducted arm

  7. Anatomical Considerations Inferior glenohumeral ligament • Heavily involved in maintaining shoulder stability • With an anterior and posterior band, it supports the humeral head like a hammock • Primary stabilizer limiting anterior, posterior & inferior humeral translation at 90° abduction • Detachment of anterior band from glenoid and labrum is known as the Bankart Lesion.

  8. Anatomical Considerations

  9. Anatomical Considerations Rotator Cuff • EMG Studies show that all (with deltoid) are active throughout full ROM of flexion, abduction and elevation • Co-contraction helps hold humeral head in center of glenoid throughout arc of motion • Create GH compressive force that helps stabilize joint

  10. Anatomical Considerations • Scapulothoracic stability has been emphasized as an important component of GH stability. • Dysfunction can lead to failure of scapular rotation beneath the humeral head, permitting abnormal translation • Trapezius, serratus anterior and rhomboids all influence scapular movements

  11. Patient Evaluation • History • Traumatic vsAtraumatic dislocation • Symptoms • General laxity • Party Trick?

  12. Patient Evaluation • Physical Exam • Muscle atrophy and scapular winging • ROM assessment • Special tests • Sulcus Sign • Load and Shift • Apprehension Test

  13. Rehabilitation • No scientific studies available to support one specific rehab regimen in preference to another • Key to pain-free shoulder function for sporting activities is functional stability or a balance between stabilizers of the shoulder and forces applied to the shoulder • Rehab should aim to optimize the performance of the dynamic stabilizers

  14. Rehabilitation • Dynamic compression—1st mechanism of functional stability • Sub-scapularis co-contracts with infraspinatus and teres minor to center and compress humeral head into glenoidfossa • Interior fibers of rotator cuff co-contract with anterior deltoid to help keep head centered in fossa

  15. Rehabilitation • Dynamic ligament tension—2nd mechanism of functional stability • Rotator cuff tendons blend with shoulder capsule at their point of insertion and serve to tighten capsule on contraction • Reactive neuromuscular control—3rd mechanism of functional stability • Involves exercising the unstable shoulder in positions that maximally challenge dynamic stabilizers---Plyometrics helps to retrain neuromuscular control

  16. Rehabilitation • Provision of stable platform under humeral head requires the scapula and humerus to move in synchrony and allows orientation of glenoid to adjust in responses to changes in arm position • Trapezius and serratus anterior contribute to 2 importan force couples that produce scapular elevation

  17. Exercises • Subscapularis • Internal rotation activities • Isometric against wall, sidelying, prone, standing • Infraspinatus • External rotation activities • Isometric against wall, sidelying, prone, standing • Teres Minor • External rotation activities • Isometric against wall, sidelying, prone, standing

  18. Exercises • Anterior deltoid • Forward flexion exercises • Supine, prone, standing forward flexion-thumb up • Push ups---wall, counter, floor • Serratus Anterior • Serratus punches, push up plus, rows • LatissimusDorsi • Lat pulls, seated press ups • Rhomboids • Rows, scap squeezes, standing horizontal abd

  19. Exercises • “Other” strengthening ex’s • PNF patterns---active-assisted, wall wash, t-band • Ceiling swiss ball walks • Ball walk outs • Shoulder geometry, alphabets • Standing abduction with forearms pressed against wall

  20. Evidenced Based Practice • Postacchini et al • 92% rate of recurrence with a mean of 7 re-dislocations in patients who had a traumatic dislocation at the age of 14-17 • 86% rate of recurrence with a mean of 2.3 re-dislocations in patients who had an atraumatic dislocation between 14-16 • Bankart lesion found in 80% of cases—each of these patients had a tramautic primary dislocation at the age of 14-17

  21. Evidenced Based Practice • Postacchini et al (cont) • 7/28 patients had surgery (5 traumatic, 2 atraumatic)—all 5 traumatic dislocators reported no issues of recurrence and had stable shoulder on exam, both atraumaticdislocators continued to have recurrence issues and were unstable on exam • 21/28 did not have surgery---all reported issues with recurrence and/or had clinical signs indicating anterior or multidirectional instability

  22. Evidenced Based Practice • Burkhead et al • 140 shoulders in 115 patients that had a dx of traumatic or atraumatic recurrent anterior, posterior or multidirectional instability were treated with specific set of strengthening exercises • 12/74 (16%) that had traumatic subluxation had good or excellent results from exercise regimen • 53/66 (80%) that had atraumaticsubluxation had good or excellent results with exercise regimen

  23. Evidenced Based Practice • Hovelius et al & DeBerardino et al • 300 patients with anterior dislocations who did not have surgery • Follow up 8-10 years after initial dislocation • 55% rate of recurrence • Combo of multiple studies from 1996-2000 • 120 patients with anterior dislocations who undwent open bankart repair • Follow up 2.5-12 years after initial dislocation • 6% rate of recurrence

  24. References • Bahu, M., Trentacosta, N., Vorys, G., Covey, A., Ahmad, C.: Multidirectional Instability: Evaluation and Treatment Options. Clinics in Sports Med., 27: 671-689, Oct. 2008 • Bonci, C., Sloan, B., Middleton, K.: Nonsurgical/Surgical Rehabiliation of the Unstable Shoulder. Journal of Sport Rehabilitation. 1:146-171. 1992 • Burkhead, W., Rockwood, C.: Treatment of Instability of The Shoulder with an Exercise Program. Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery. 74A: 890-896. 1992 • Dodson, C., Cordasco, F.: Anterior Glenohumeral Joint Dislocations. Orthopedic Clin N AM. 39: 507-518. 2008

  25. References • Mallon, W., Speer, K.: Multidirectional Instability: Current Concepts. Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery. 4: 54-64. 1995. • Postacchini, F., Gumina, S., Cinotti, G.: Anterior Shoulder Dislocation in Adolescents. Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery. 9: 470-474. 2000. • Walton, J., Paxinos, A., Tzannes, A., Callanan, M., Hayes, K., Murrell, G.: The Unstable Shoulder in the Adolescent Athlete. The American Journal of Sports Medicine. 30:758-767. 2002 • Wang, R., Arciero, R.: Treating the Athlete with Anterior Shoulder Instability. Clinical Sports Medicine. 27: 631-648. 2008

More Related