| Literature DB >> 23019776 |
David E Hartigan1, Christian J H Veillette, Joaquin Sanchez-Sotelo, John W Sperling, Thomas C Shives, Robert H Cofield.
Abstract
This study assesses function after limb sparing bone tumour resections of the proximal humerus. Twenty-seven patients had an intraarticular resection with reconstruction using an anatomic prosthesis-bone graft composite with average clinical follow-up of 63 years (range: 13-15.8 years). Pain relief was achieved for 22 shoulders (81%); 19 of 25 patients responding (76%) were satisfied. Active elevation averaged 62 degrees, external rotation 25 degrees, and internal rotation to L-4. Complications included instability in 7, nonunion in 4, implant loosening in 3 of these and tumour recurrence in 1. There were 7 reoperations. Using the Neer rating, 19 primary operations (70%) were successful. The Musculoskeletal Tumor Society Score averaged 18.5 (62%), the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons functional score 18.4 (37%) with a total score of 51 (51%), and on the Simple Shoulder Test 5.4 of 12 questions were answered affirmatively. This procedure is oncologically safe. There are structural complications, notably shoulder instability. Function ratings are one-third to one-half normal.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23019776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Orthop Belg ISSN: 0001-6462 Impact factor: 0.500