| Literature DB >> 21619663 |
Angela Cadogan1, Mark Laslett, Wayne A Hing, Peter J McNair, Mark H Coates.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The prevalence of imaged pathology in primary care has received little attention and the relevance of identified pathology to symptoms remains unclear. This paper reports the prevalence of imaged pathology and the association between pathology and response to diagnostic blocks into the subacromial bursa (SAB), acromioclavicular joint (ACJ) and glenohumeral joint (GHJ).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21619663 PMCID: PMC3127806 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-12-119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Distribution of primary pain required for inclusion in the study.
Figure 2Diagram showing study procedures, results of diagnostic blocks and dropout explanations. SAB, subacromial bursa; PAR, positive anaesthetic response (≥80% post-injection reduction in pain intensity); ACJ, acromioclavicular joint; GHJ, glenohumeral joint; MR arthrogram, magnetic resonance arthrogram. Numbers refer to the number (n) of subjects.
Imaging diagnostic criteria
| Pathology | Imaging Diagnostic Criteria |
|---|---|
| Acromioclavicular joint | |
| arthropathy/degenerative change | joint space narrowing, subchondral sclerosis, subchondral cystic change or marginal osteophytes. |
| osteolysis | bony resorption or increased lucency in distal clavicle. |
| Glenohumeral joint | |
| arthropathy/degenerative change | joint space narrowing, subchondral sclerosis, subchondral cystic change or marginal osteophytes. |
| other | loose bodies, joint calcifications. |
| Calcification of rotator cuff components | |
| supraspinatus | calcific deposits adjacent to the greater tuberosity on AP-external rotation x-ray view. |
| infraspinatus | calcific deposits adjacent to the greater tuberosity on AP-internal rotation x-ray view. |
| subscapularis | calcific deposits in the anterior shoulder region on axial x-ray view. |
| ACJ pathology | Capsular hypertrophy, cortical irregularity or osteophytes, capsular bulge, joint space narrowing or widening. |
| Glenohumeral joint effusion | more than 2 mm between posterior glenoid labrum and posterior capsule. |
| Rotator cuff | |
| normal | normal contour, normal echogenicity. |
| calcification | focal increase in echogenicity with or without shadowing. |
| tendinosis | tendon thickening or decreased echogenicity. |
| tear | |
| intrasubstance | hypoechoic change not extending to articular or bursal surface. |
| partial thickness | SSp and ISp: hypoechoic change extending to either the articular or bursal surface. Subscapularis: partial fibre discontinuity. |
| full thickness | SSp and ISp: hypoechoic region extends from bursal to articular surface. Subscapularis: complete fibre discontinuity. |
| Subacromial bursa | |
| bursitis | hypoechoic fluid or effusion present and >1 mm thick. |
| bursal thickening | ≥2 mm measured from deep margin of deltoid to superficial margin of supraspinatus. |
| "bunching" | Fluid distension of the SAB or 'buckling' of the rotator cuff during abduction |
| Acromioclavicular joint | |
| arthropathy/degenerative changes | capsular hypertrophy with or without joint space narrowing, subchondral cystic change, bone marrow oedema or osteophytes |
| osteolysis | bony resorption or bone marrow oedema in the distal clavicle |
| Rotator cuff | |
| normal | normal contour, normal signal |
| tendinosis | tendon thickening or mild increase in T2 signal |
| intrasubstance tear | linear increase in T2 signal which does not extend to the articular or bursal surface. |
| partial thickness tear | linear increase in T2 signal extending to the (bursal or articular) margins. |
| full thickness tear | fluid signal intensity or contrast extending from the bursal to the articular side lesion of the rotator cuff. Contrast seen in the SAB. |
| Subacromial bursitis | increased T2 signal within the SAB |
| Glenohumeral joint | |
| rotator interval pathology | thickening, signal change or tear involving the biceps pulley, superior glenohumeral or coracohumeral ligament, or synovitis in the rotator interval. |
| arthropathy/degenerative change | chondral loss, subchondral sclerosis, cystic changes, bone marrow oedema or osteophytes |
| labral tear | contrast extending into- or undermining the glenoid labrum, not conforming to normal variant anatomy. |
Abbreviations: AP, antero-posterior view; ACJ, acromioclavicular joint; SSp, supraspinatus; ISp, infraspinatus; SAB, subacromial bursa;
adefinitions based upon accepted diagnostic criteria [33,35]
Subject demographics
| All subjects | MRA group | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Range | Mean (SD) | Range | |
| Age (years) | 42 (14) | 18-81 | 42 (14) | 18-81 |
| Height (cm) | 172 (10) | 147-199 | 172 (10) | 151-198 |
| Weight (kg) | 80.6 (18.0) | 50.3-189.0 | 82.3 (15.8) | 52.7-125.3 |
| Symptom duration (weeks)* | 7 (13) | 0-175 | 7 (13) | 0-175 |
| Worst pain previous 48 hours (100 mm VAS) | 62 (23) | 3-100 | 63 (24) | 3-100 |
| Average pain previous 48 hours (100 mm VAS) | 37 (22) | 1-100 | 37 (24) | 1-100 |
| Male gender | 107 (51) | 53 (57) | ||
| Right hand dominant | 110 (53) | 79 (85) | ||
| Dominant arm affected | 110 (53) | 48 (52) | ||
| ACC Claim | 193 (93) | 86 (93) | ||
| Referrals | ||||
| physiotherapist | 203 (98) | 89 (96) | ||
| general practitioner | 5 (2) | 4 (4) | ||
| Employment status | ||||
| in paid employment | 166 (80) | 76 (82) | ||
| on modified duties due to shoulder pain | 18 (9) | 10 (11) | ||
| off work due to shoulder pain | 7 (3) | 4 (4) | ||
| not currently employed/working | 41 (20) | 17 (18) | ||
| Co-existent medical conditions | 70 (34) | 33 (36) | ||
| Current smoker | 39 (19) | 18 (20) | ||
Abbreviations: MRA, magnetic resonance arthrogram; SD, standard deviation; VAS, visual analogue scale: ACC, Accident Compensation Corporation.
*symptom duration was not normally distributed. Figures presented are median (IQ range).
Figure 3Prevalence of pathology identified on x-ray. n, number of cases; ACJ, acromioclavicular joint; GHJ, glenohumeral joint
Figure 4Prevalence of pathology identified on ultrasound scan. (n), number of cases; US, ultrasound; GHJ, glenohumeral joint; SAB, subacromial bursa; CAL, coracoacromial ligament; LHB, long head of biceps tendon. aSubacromial pathology: any one of three present; dimension ≥2 mm, fluid/effusion or calcification. bSubacromial bursa dimensions: <1 mm (71); 1-2 mm (82); 2-3 mm (42); >3 mm (5). cSubacromial bursal effusion associated with full thickness rotator cuff tear (7). dSupraspinatus tears: intrasubstance (23); partial thickness-bursal surface (4); partial thickness-articular surface (8); full thickness (10). eInfraspinatus tears: intrasubstance (1); partial thickness (1); full thickness (1). fSubscapularis tears: intrasubstance (5); partial thickness (4); full thickness (1).
Figure 5Shoulder x-ray images of ACJ pathology and rotator cuff calcification. a) AP x-ray view in external rotation showing degenerative acromioclavicular joint changes (white arrow); b) outlet view showing calcification in line with the infraspinatus tendon (black arrow).
Figure 6Ultrasound scan images of subacromial bursa and supraspinatus pathology. a) hypoechoic region (between calipers) indicating an intrasubstance tear within posterior fibres of supraspinatus (longitudinal view) overlying the head of humerus (white arrowhead); b) thickened subacromial bursa (calipers); c) bunching of the SAB (white arrow) under the acromion during dynamic abduction.
Figure 7Prevalence of subacromial bursa bunching under the acromion and coracoacromial ligament on ultrasound during dynamic abduction. SAB, subacromial bursa; US, ultrasound; CAL, coracoacromial ligament. Percentages are in reference to the number of cases in which bursal bunching was assessed (acromion n = 195; CAL n = 94).
Figure 8Prevalence of pathology identified on MR arthrogram. (n), number of cases; LHB, long head of biceps tendon; ACJ, acromioclavicular joint; GHJ, glenohumeral joint; OA, osteoarthritis; SAB, subacromial bursa; aACJ degenerative changes: mild (28); moderate (18); severe (5). bAcromioclavicular joint pathology - other: os acromiale (2); unfused acromial ossification centre (1); acromial spur (4); widened joint space/subluxation (2); synovitis (1). cRotator interval pathology: coracohumeral or superior glenohumeral ligament thickening (40); rotator interval synovitis (39); biceps pulley, coracohumeral or superior glenohumeral ligament tear (13). dGlenoid labrum tear: isolated labral tear (5); associated pathology present (39); SLAP tear (20); SLAP Type II (17), Type III (2), Type IV (1); anterior-inferior tear (9); semi- or full circumferential tear (7); posterior-superior tear (1); other tear (9); paralabral cyst (10); paralabral cyst causing suprascapular nerve compression (2). eGlenohumeral joint pathology - other: bony irregularity humeral head without marrow oedema (12); Hill-Sachs lesion (3); intra-articular/osseous body (3); ganglion cyst between coracoacromial and coracohumeral ligaments (1); greater tuberosity fracture (1). fSubacromial bursitis: mild (52); moderate (12); severe (4) gSupraspinatus tears: intrasubstance (11); partial thickness-bursal surface (5); partial thickness articular surface (12); full thickness (7). hInfraspinatus tears: intrasubstance (4); partial thickness (3); full thickness (0) iSubscapularis tears: intrasubstance (4); partial thickness (0); full thickness (2)
Figure 9MR arthrogram images of shoulder pathology. a) subacromial bursitis - coronal PD fat saturated image showing region of hyperintensity in the subacromial bursa (black arrow); b) partial thickness, articular surface supraspinatus tear (white arrow) - coronal T1 fat saturated image showing contrast extending into the supraspinatus tendon. c) ACJ degenerative changes (white arrow) -coronal PD fat saturated image; d) type III SLAP tear (white arrow) with contrast filling a paralabral cyst (black arrow) which extended into the supraglenoid and suprascapular notch causing neural compression -coronal PD fat saturated image.
Figure 10Anaesthetic responses to diagnostic blocks. SAB, subacromial bursa; ACJ, acromioclavicular joint; GHJ, glenohumeral joint.
Summary of imaging variables demonstrating association with positive anaesthetic response to diagnostic blocks (p ≤ 0.05 or OR >2.0)
| Pathology identified on imaging | Pathology identified | % with pathology present reporting PAR | % with pathology absent reporting PAR | OR | Fishers test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X-ray: type 3 acromion | 4 | 75 | 33 | 6.2 (0.64, 61.23) | 0.109 |
| X-ray: os acromiale | 4 | 75 | 33 | 6.1 (0.63, 60.25) | 0.112 |
| X-ray: supraspinatus calcification | 16 | 56 | 31 | 2.8 (1.00, 7.97) | 0.054 |
| US: supraspinatus calcification | 33 | 49 | 31 | 2.1 (1.00, 4.55) | 0.068 |
| US: supraspinatus FTT | 10 | 70** | 32 | 5.0 (1.25, 20.11) | 0.033 |
| X-ray: ACJ pathology | 21 | 14 | 16 | 2.1 (0.69, 6.52) | 0.189 |
| US: supraspinatus tear PTT (articular surface) | 8 | 0 | 17 | 2.1 (0.39, 11.05) | 0.323 |
| US: LHB tendinosis | 3 | 0 | 16 | 3.1 (0.27, 35.39) | 0.374 |
| US: no rotator cuff tear | 19 | 21** | 0 | 1.3 (1.11, 1.46) | 0.029 |
| US: supraspinatus tendinosis | 11 | 27 | 14 | 2.3 (0.51, 10.30) | 0.374 |
| US: subscapularis tendinosis | 3 | 33 | 15 | 2.8 (0.23, 33.27) | 0.421 |
| US: biceps tendon sheath effusion | 13 | 46** | 10 | 8.0 (2.02, 31.72) | 0.004 |
| MRA: ACJ pathology | 46 | 20 | 11 | 2.0 (0.50, 8.23) | 0.516 |
| MRA: osteolysis lateral clavicle | 5 | 40 | 15 | 3.9 (0.58, 26.58) | 0.187 |
| MRA: contrast seen in SAB | 6 | 33 | 15 | 2.9 (0.47, 17.99) | 0.254 |
Abbreviations: PAR, positive anaesthetic response (≥80% post-injection pain intensity reduction); OR, adjusted odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; SAB, subacromial bursa; US, ultrasound; FTT, full thickness tear; ACJ, acromioclavicular joint; PTT, partial thickness tear; LHB, long head of biceps; GHJ, glenohumeral joint; MRA, magnetic resonance arthrogram.
Percentages do not total 100% as these represent proportion of subjects with or without pathology on imaging (row percentages in contingency table) in the PAR group. Negative anaesthetic response group results (column percentages) are not presented.
**p ≤ 0.05