| Literature DB >> 26638117 |
Arnd F Viehöfer1, Jess G Snedeker1,2, Daniel Baumgartner3, Christian Gerber1.
Abstract
Osteoarthritis (OA) of the glenohumeral joint constitutes the most frequent indication for nontraumatic shoulder joint replacement. Recently, a small critical shoulder angle (CSA) was found to be associated with a high prevalence of OA. This study aims to verify the hypothesis that a small CSA leads to higher glenohumeral joint reaction forces during activities of daily living than a normal CSA. A shoulder simulator with simulated deltoid (DLT), supraspinatus (SSP), infraspinatus/teres minor (ISP/TM), and subscapularis (SSC) musculotendinous units was constructed. The DLT wrapping on the humerus was simulated using a pulley that could be horizontally adjusted to simulate the 28° CSA found in OA or the 33° CSA found in disease-free shoulders. Over a range of motion between 6° and 82° of thoracohumeral abduction joint forces were measured using a six-axis load cell. An OA-associated CSA yielded higher net joint reaction forces than a normal CSA over the entire range of motion. The maximum difference of 26.4 N (8.5%) was found at 55° of thoracohumeral abduction. Our model thus suggests that a CSA typical for OA predisposes the glenohumeral joint to higher joint reaction forces and could plausibly play a role in joint overloading and development of OA.Entities:
Keywords: biomechanics; critical shoulder angle; etiology; osteoarthritis; shoulder
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26638117 DOI: 10.1002/jor.23122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Res ISSN: 0736-0266 Impact factor: 3.494