Literature DB >> 23845402

Delayed early passive motion is harmless to shoulder rotator cuff healing in a rabbit model.

Shurong Zhang1, Hong Li, Hongyue Tao, Hongyun Li, Samson Cho, Yinghui Hua, Jiwu Chen, Shiyi Chen, Yunxia Li.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Postoperative passive motion is the most widely accepted rehabilitation protocol after rotator cuff repair; however, a rotator cuff retear remains a frequent surgical complication. Clinical outcomes indicate that early passive motion is harmless to rotator cuff healing, but no laboratory evidence supports this proposition. HYPOTHESES: (1) Immediate postoperative immobilization improves rotator cuff healing in rabbits. (2) Early passive motion after short-term immobilization does not harm rotator cuff healing in rabbits. STUDY
DESIGN: Controlled laboratory study.
METHODS: An injury to the supraspinatus tendon was created and repaired in 90 New Zealand White rabbits, after which they were randomly separated into 3 groups: (1) nonimmobilization (NI; n = 30), (2) continuous immobilization (IM; n = 30), and (3) immobilization with early passive motion (IP; n = 30). At 3, 6, and 12 weeks postoperatively, 5 rabbits from each group were sacrificed for histological evaluation, biomechanical testing, and magnetic resonance imaging.
RESULTS: The histological study demonstrated better postoperative healing in the IM and IP groups, with clusters of chondrocytes accumulated at the tendon-bone junction. Magnetic resonance imaging illustrated that the tendon-bone junction was intact in the IM and IP groups. The magnetic resonance quantification analysis showed that the signal-to-noise quotient (SNQ) of the NI group was not significantly higher than that of the immobilization groups at 3 weeks (P = .232) or 6 weeks (P = .117), but it was significantly different at 12 weeks (NI vs IM, P = .006; NI vs IP, P = .009). At 12 weeks, the failure load was significantly higher in the IM and IP groups than in the NI group (NI vs IM, P = .002; NI vs IP, P = .002), but no difference was found between the IM and IP groups (P = .599).
CONCLUSION: Immediate postoperative immobilization led to better tendon-bone healing than immediate postoperative mobilization, and under immobilization, early passive motion was harmless to tendon-bone healing in this study. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The results have an implication in supporting the rehabilitation protocol of early passive motion after rotator cuff repair.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biomechanical testing; magnetic resonance imaging; passive motion; rotator cuff healing; signal intensity

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23845402     DOI: 10.1177/0363546513493251

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Sports Med        ISSN: 0363-5465            Impact factor:   6.202


  6 in total

Review 1.  Rotator cuff repair: post-operative rehabilitation concepts.

Authors:  Terrance A Sgroi; Michelle Cilenti
Journal:  Curr Rev Musculoskelet Med       Date:  2018-03

2.  Surgeon-Therapist Communication Must Be Improved in Rotator Cuff Repair Rehabilitation: An Electronic Survey of Physical Therapists on Postoperative Rehabilitation Protocols and Communication with Treating Surgeons.

Authors:  Mark Schultzel; Karl B Scheidt; Brian McNeill; Christopher M Klein; Colin Blout; John M Itamura
Journal:  Perm J       Date:  2021-05

3.  Effect of platelet-rich plasma and bioactive glass powder for the improvement of rotator cuff tendon-to-bone healing in a rabbit model.

Authors:  Yang Wu; Yu Dong; Shiyi Chen; Yunxia Li
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2014-11-28       Impact factor: 5.923

4.  Prognosis Driven Rehabilitation After Rotator Cuff Repair Surgery.

Authors:  Dirk Kokmeyer; Eric Dube; Peter J Millett
Journal:  Open Orthop J       Date:  2016-07-21

Review 5.  Rehabilitation following rotator cuff repair: A work of the Commission Rehabilitation of the German Society of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery e. V. (DVSE) in collaboration with the German Association for Physiotherapy (ZVK) e. V., the Association Physical Therapy, Association for Physical Professions (VPT) e. V. and the Section Rehabilitation-Physical Therapy of the German Society for Orthopaedics and Trauma e. V. (DGOU).

Authors:  Christian Jung; Lena Tepohl; Reina Tholen; Knut Beitzel; Stefan Buchmann; Thomas Gottfried; Casper Grim; Bettina Mauch; Gert Krischak; Hans Ortmann; Christian Schoch; Frieder Mauch
Journal:  Obere Extrem       Date:  2018-02-22

6.  Engineering an enthesis-like graft for rotator cuff repair: An approach to fabricate highly biomimetic scaffold capable of zone-specifically releasing stem cell differentiation inducers.

Authors:  Can Chen; Qiang Shi; Muzhi Li; Yang Chen; Tao Zhang; Yan Xu; Yunjie Liao; Shulin Ding; Zhanwen Wang; Xing Li; Chunfeng Zhao; Lunquan Sun; Jianzhong Hu; Hongbin Lu
Journal:  Bioact Mater       Date:  2022-01-05
  6 in total

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