| Literature DB >> 26674725 |
Raphael Micheroli1, Diego Kyburz2, Adrian Ciurea3, Beat Dubs4, Martin Toniolo3, Samuel Pascal Bisig5, Giorgio Tamborrini6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: High resolution ultrasonography is a non-painful and non-invasive imaging technique which is useful for the assessment of shoulder pain causes, as clinical examination often does not allow an exact diagnosis. The aim of this study was to compare the findings of clinical examination and high resolution ultrasonography in patients presenting with painful shoulder.Entities:
Keywords: diagnosis; pain; physical examination; shoulder; ultrasonography
Year: 2015 PMID: 26674725 PMCID: PMC4579705 DOI: 10.15557/JoU.2015.0003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ultrason ISSN: 2084-8404
Diagnostic criteria for HRUS findings used in the study
| Shoulder structure | HRUS finding | Tear-Grade | Diagnostic criteria |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bursa | Bursitis | Abnormal hypoechoic (relative to subdermal fat, but it sometimes may be isoechoic or hyperechoic) tissue that is nondisplaceable and poorly compressible. May exhibit Doppler signal | |
| Effusion | Abnormal hypoechoic (relative to subdermal fat, but it sometimes may be isoechoic or hyperechoic) material, that is displaceable and compressible. Does not exhibit Doppler signal | ||
| Rotator cuff tendons | Tendon calcification | Hyperechoic echotexture with or without an acoustic shadow (depending on the amount of calcification) within the rotator cuff | |
| Tendinosis | Thick swollen tendon with hypoechoic echotexture. Partial interruption may occur inside the tendon. Irregularity of fibrillar pattern, fragmentation, and focal hypoechoic or hyperechoic areas | ||
| Tendon tear | Partial thickness | Hypoechoic zone or focus within the rotator cuff. Focal cuff thinning on the articular or deltoid located side | |
| Intramural | Hypoechoic zone or focus within the rotator cuff. Focal cuff thinning neither on the articular nor on the deltoid located side | ||
| Full thickness | Complete loss of tendon substance with visualization of the cuff margins. Naked tuberosity, nonvisualization of the rotator cuff with approximation of the deltoid muscle to the surface of the humeral head | ||
| AC joint | Joint space narrowing | Narrowing of the space of the two articular forming bones (comparison with the contralateral side) | |
| Osteophytes | A step-up bony prominence at the end of the normal bone contour, or at the margin of the joint seen in two perpendicular planes, with or without acoustic shadow | ||
| Joint effusion | Extension of the joint capsule filled with anechoic or inhomogeneously hypoechoic fluid (comparison with the contralateral side) | ||
| Long biceps tendon | Tendon sheath effusion | Extension of the joint capsule filled with anechoic or inhomogeneously hypoechoic fluid (comparison with the contralateral side) | |
| Subluxation | Visualization of a subluxated long biceps tendon | ||
| Tendon tear | Complete loss of tendon substance with visualization of a empty tendon sheath |
Fig. 1Examples of HRUS pathologies of the shoulder ( A. Shoulder lateral longitudinal view. No pathology. M. supraspinatus tendon (star), humerus (triangle). B. Shoulder anterior transverse view. Bursitis subacromialis. Effusion (star), synovial proliferation (arrow). C. Shoulder lateral longitudinal view. Tendon calcification. M. supraspinatus tendon (star), calcification with distal ultrasound cancellation (arrow). D. Shoulder lateral transversal view. Intramural tear. M. supraspinatus tendon (star), intramural tear (arrow). E. Schoulder lateral longitudinal view. Partial thickness tear. M. supraspinatus tendon (star), partial thickness tear (triangle). F. Shoulder lateral longitudinal view. Full thickness tear. M. supraspinatus tendon (star), zone of tear (triangle). G. Shoulder frontal view. AC joint osteoarthritis. Clavicula (star), acromion (plus sign), osteophyte (triangle). H. Shoulder anterior transversal view. Long biceps tendon sheath effusion. Long biceps tendon (star), effusion (arrow)
Overview of the clinical examinations according to Buckup et al.(
| Test | Procedure | Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Bursitis sign | The examiner palpates the anterolateral subacromial region with his or her index and middle fingers | Localized tenderness to palpation in the subacromial space suggests irritation of the subacromial bursa |
| Jobe supraspinatus test | With the elbow extended, the patients arm is held at 90° of abduction, 30° of horizontal flexion, and in internal-neutral and external rotation. The examiner exerts pressure on the upper arm during th e abduction and horizontal flexion motion | Where the test elicits pain and the patient is unable to abduct the arm 90° and hold it against gravity, this indicates a tear or pathology of the supraspinatus tendon, or muscle |
| Painful arc I | The arm is passively and actively abducted from the rest position alongside the trunk | Pain occurring in abduction between 70° and 120° is a sign of a lesion of the supraspinatus tendon, which becomes impinged between the greater tubercle of the humerus and the acromion in this phase of the motion. Patients are usually free of pain above 120° |
| Drop arm sign | The Patient is seated and the extended arm passively abducted 90°. The Patient is instructed to hold the arm in this position without support and then slowly lower it | Weakness in maintaining the position of the arm, with or without pain, or sudden droppping of the arm suggests a m. supraspinatus lesion |
| Hawkins and Kennedy impingement tests | The examiner immobilizes the scapula with one hand while the other hand adducts the patient's 90°-forward-flexed and internally rotated arm (moving it toward the contralateral side of the body) | Pain indicates a positive test for supraspinatus pathology |
| Gerber lift off test | The patient places the dorsum of the hand on his or her back with the arm in internal rotation. The patient then lifts the hand away from the back, the examiner should apply a load, pushing the hand toward the back to test the strength of the subscapularis and to test how the scapula acts under dynamic loading | Where a tendon rupture or insufficiency of the subscapularis is present, the patient will be unable to lift the hand off the back against the examiner's resistance. Where pain renders maximum internal rotation impossible, the belly press test may be performed |
| Belly press test | The patient's forearm lies along the abdomen with the elbow flexed. The patient attempts to continue forcefully pressing arm against abdomen | A tear in the supraspinatus tendon results in loss of the internal rotation component. The elbow deviates laterally and posteriorly under the influence of the latissimus dorsi and teres major. Flexion also occurs in the wrist |
| M. infraspinatus test | The patient's arms should hang relaxed with the elbows flexed 90° but not quite touching the trunk. The examiner places his or her palms on the dorsum of each of the patient's hands and then asks the patient to externally rotate both forearms against the resistance of the examiners hands | Pain or weakness in external rotation indicates a disorder of the infraspinatus (external rotator). As infraspinatus tears are usually painless, weakness in rotation strongly suggests a tear in this muscle |
| Painful arc II | The patient's arm is passively and actively abducted from the rest position alongside the trunk | Pain in the acromioclavicular joint occurs between 140° and 180° of abduction |
| AC Joint tenderness | The examiner palpates the acromioclavicular joint | Localized tenderness in the acromioclavicular joint indicates pathology |
| Cross body action | The 90° abducted arm on the affected side is forcible adducted across the chest toward the normal side. | Pain in the acromioclavicular joint suggests joint pathology |
| Abbott–Saunders test | The patient's arm is externally rotated and abducted about 120° with progressive internal rotation. The examiner slowly lowers the arm from this position. The examiner guides this motion of the patients arm with one hand while resting the other on the patients shoulder and palpating the bicipital groove with the index and middle finger | Pain in the region of the bicipital groove or a palpable or audible snap suggest a disorder of the biceps tendon (subluxation sign) |
| Palm up test | The patient's arm is extended in supination at 90° of abduction and 30° of horizontal flexion. The patient attempts to either maintain this position or continue to abduct and pronate the arm against the downward pressure of the examiners hand | A positive test elicits increased tenderness in the bicipital groove especially with the arm supinated and is indicative of bicipital tendinitis or tendinosis |
| Yergason test | The patient's arm is alongside the trunk and flexed 90° at the elbow. One of the examiners hands rests on the patients shoulder and palpates the bicipital groove with the index finger while the other hand grasps the patients forearm. The patient is asked to supinate the forearm against the examiners resistance. This places isolated tension on the long head of the biceps tendon | Pain in the bicipital groove is a sign of a lesion of the biceps tendon, its tendon sheath or its ligamentous connection via the transverse ligament. The typical provoked pain can be increased by pressing on the tendon in the bicipital groove |
| Hueter sign | The patient is seated with the arm extended at the elbow and the forearm in supination. The examiner grasps the posterior aspect of the patient's forearm. The patient is then asked to flex the elbow against the resistance of the examiners hand | In a rupture of the long head of the biceps tendon, the distally displaced muscle belly can be observed as a “ball” directly proximal to the elbow |
Assumed corresponding shoulder structure of the clinical tests
| Clinical test | Assumed corresponding shoulder structure |
|---|---|
| Bursitis sign | Bursa subacromialis |
| Jobe supraspinatus test | M. supraspinatus |
| Painful arc I | |
| Drop arm test | |
| Hawkins and Kennedy impingement test | |
| Gerber lift off test | M. subscapularis |
| Belly press test | |
| Infraspinatus test | M. infraspinatus |
| AC joint tenderness | AC joint |
| Painful arc II | |
| Cross body adduction stress test | |
| Abbott–Saunders test | Long biceps tendon (luxated) |
| Palm up test | Long biceps tendon |
| Yergason test | |
| Hueter sign |
Baseline characteristics of the subjects (n = 100)
| Characteristic | Patients (n = 100) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | mean 53.5 ± 14.3 (range 20–84) |
| median (50% percentile) 54 | |
| Sex (male/female) | 41/59 |
| Affected shoulder site (r/l) | 57/43 |
HRUS examination findings (n = 100)
| Shoulder structure | Pathology | Tear grade | Patients (n = 100) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bursa subacromialis | 87 | ||
| Bursitis | 87 | ||
| M. supraspinatus | 69 | ||
| Tendon calcification | 35 | ||
| Tendinosis | 23 | ||
| Tendon calcification + tendinosis | 7 | ||
| Tendon tear | 29 | ||
| Partial thickness | 20 | ||
| Intramural | 2 | ||
| Full thickness | 7 | ||
| M. subscapularis | 11 | ||
| Tendon calcification | 8 | ||
| Tendinosis | 2 | ||
| Tendon calcification + Tendinosis | 2 | ||
| Tendon tear | 2 | ||
| Partial thickness | 1 | ||
| Intramural | 0 | ||
| Full thickness | 1 | ||
| M. infraspinatus | 10 | ||
| Tendon calcification | 6 | ||
| Tendinosis | 2 | ||
| Tendon tear | 2 | ||
| Partial thickness | 1 | ||
| Intramural | 0 | ||
| Full thickness | 1 | ||
| AC joint | 24 | ||
| Joint space narrowing | 17 | ||
| Osteophytes | 15 | ||
| Joint effusion | 2 | ||
| Long biceps tendon | 20 | ||
| Tendon sheath effusion | 17 | ||
| Tendinosis | 3 | ||
| Subluxation | 1 | ||
| Tendon tear | 1 | ||
| M. pectoralis major | 1 | ||
| Tendon tear | 1 |
Diagnostic values of clinical examinations compared with HRUS examination findings
| Shoulder structure | Clinical examination | Sensitivity | Specificity | Positive predictive value | Negative predictive value | Empirical Pearson's corr. coeff. | Uniweighted Cohen's kcoeff. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bursa subacromialis | Bursitis sign | 0,09 | 1 | 1 | 0,14 | 0,11 | 0,03 |
| M. supraspinatus | Jobe supraspinatus test | 0,81 | 0,55 | 0,8 | 0,57 | 0,36 | 0,36 |
| Painful arc 1 | 0,83 | 0,35 | 0,74 | 0,48 | 0,2 | 0,19 | |
| Drop arm test | 0,12 | 1 | 1 | 0,34 | 0,2 | 0,08 | |
| Hawkins and Kennedy impingement test | 0,86 | 0,45 | 0,78 | 0,58 | 0,33 | 0,33 | |
| M. subscapularis | Gerber lift off test | 1 | 0,55 | 0,22 | 1 | 0,34 | 0,21 |
| Belly press test | 0,73 | 0,72 | 0,24 | 0,96 | 0,3 | 0,24 | |
| M. infraspinatus | Infraspinatus test | 0,9 | 0,74 | 0,28 | 0,99 | 0,41 | 0,33 |
| AC joint | Painful arc II | 0,25 | 0,96 | 0,67 | 0,8 | 0,31 | 0,27 |
| AC joint tenderness | 0,38 | 0,99 | 0,9 | 0,83 | 0,52 | 0,45 | |
| Cross body adduction stress test | 0,38 | 0,96 | 0,75 | 0,83 | 0,44 | 0,4 | |
| Long biceps tendon (luxated) | Abbott-Saunders test | 1 | 0,99 | 0,5 | 1 | 0,7 | 0,66 |
| Long biceps tendon | Palm up test | 0,47 | 0,75 | 0,31 | 0,86 | 0,2 | 0,19 |
| Yergason test | 0,32 | 0,88 | 0,38 | 0,85 | 0,21 | 0,2 | |
| Hueter sign | 0,05 | 1 | 1 | 0,81 | 0,2 | 0,04 |
corr. coeff. = correlation coefficient