| Literature DB >> 28416022 |
Alison R Shire1, Thor A B Stæhr2, Jesper B Overby2, Mathias Bastholm Dahl2, Julie Sandell Jacobsen2, David Høyrup Christiansen3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exercise is frequently suggested as a treatment option for patients presenting with symptoms of subacromial impingement syndrome. Some would argue implementing a specific exercise strategy with special focus on correction of kinematic deficits would be superior to general exercise strategy. There is however a lack of evidence comparing such exercise strategies to determine which is the most effective in the treatment of subacromial impingement syndrome. The aim of this review is to evaluate whether implementing specific exercise strategies involving resistive exercises are more effective than a general exercise strategy for the treatment of patients with subacromial impingement syndrome.Entities:
Keywords: Function; Impingement; Pain; Physiotherapy; Shoulder; Subacromial; Training
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28416022 PMCID: PMC5393017 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-017-1518-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Going from assessments of risk of bias to judgments about study limitations
| Risk of bias | Across studies | Interpretations | Considerations | GRADE assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low risk of bias. | Most information is from studies at low risk of bias. | Plausible bias unlikely to seriously alter the results. | No apparent limitations. | No serious limitations, do not downgrade. |
| Unclear risk of bias. | Most information is from studies at low or unclear risk of bias. | Plausible bias that raises some doubt about the results. | Potential limitations are unlikely to lower confidence in the estimate of effect. | No serious limitations, do not downgrade. |
| Potential limitations are likely to lower confidence in the estimate of effect. | Serious limitations, downgrade one level. | |||
| High risk of bias. | The proportion of information from studies at high risk of bias is sufficient to affect the interpretation of results. | Plausible bias that seriously weakens confidence in the results. | Crucial limitation for one criterion, or some limitations for multiple criteria, sufficient to lower confidence in the estimate of effect. | Serious limitations, downgrade one level |
| Crucial limitation for one or more criteria sufficient to substantially lower confidence in the estimate of effect. | Very serious limitations, downgrade two levels. |
Adapted from Table 12.2.d from Cochrane Handbook [42]. Further guidelines for factor 1 (of 5) in a GRADE assessment: Going from assessments of risk of bias to judgments about study limitations for main outcomes
Levels of Quality
| Underlying methodology | Quality rating |
|---|---|
| Randomized trials; or double-upgraded observational studies. | High |
| Downgraded randomized trials; or upgraded observational studies. | Moderate |
| Double-downgraded randomized trials; or observational studies. | Low |
| Triple-downgraded randomized trials; or downgraded observational studies; or case series/case reports. | Very low |
Adopted from Cochrane Handbook [42]: Levels of quality of a body of evidence in the GRADE approach
Best evidence synthesis guidelines
| Strong evidence | Provided by consistenta statistically significant findings in outcome |
| Moderate evidence | Provided by statistically significant findings in outcome measures |
| Limited evidence | Provided by statistically significant findings in at least one medium |
| No or insufficient evidence | If results of eligible studies do not meet the criteria for one of the |
Best evidence synthesis guidelines as modified by Dorrestijn et a [50] from the synthesis by van Tulder et al. [45]
Abbreviations: RCT randomized controlled trial
a Findings are considered consistent if they point in the same direction
b If the number of studies showing evidence is lower than 50% of the total number of studies found within the same category of methodological quality, we state no evidence
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart of inclusion of studies. The flow of the search and selection process in this systematic review and meta-analysis of specific exercises for patients with subacromial impingement syndrome. Review Manager (RevMan) 5.3 [44, 71]
Characteristics and evaluation of included studies
| Study | Method | Participants | Outcome measures | Results/comments | Key domains | Score | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baskurt 2011 [ | Randomized by simple random table. |
| Measured before and after intervention. | Patients outcomes improved statistically in both groups ( | Low risk: | High risk (downgrade 1) | Moderate |
| Dilek 2016 [ | Randomized using block randomization. |
| Measured at baseline, 6 and 12 weeks. | Both groups improved significantly in ROM, pain scores, isometric strength in all angles, Sense of kinesthesia at 0° ER, ASES and WORC ( | Low risk: | High risk (downgrade 1) | Moderate |
| Martins 2012 [ | Unclear randomization |
| Pain: VNS | Both groups exhibited significant reduction in pain scores ( | Low risk: | High risk (downgrade 1) | Moderate |
| Mulligan 2016 [ | Randomized using blind draw. |
| Measured at baseline, 4 weeks, 8 weeks, 16 weeks | No significant between group and time. Both groups exhibited significant reduction in pain scores and function. However, no significant differences between groups. | Low risk: | High risk (downgrade 1) | Moderate |
| Struyf 2013 [ | Randomized using closed envelopes. |
| Measured at baseline, after nine sessions (4–8 weeks) and 12 weeks Post treatment. | After nine sessions the Experimental group demonstrated significant effect on self-reported disability compared to the Control group ( | Low risk: | High risk (downgrade 1) | Moderate |
| Wang 2006 [ | Randomized using pre-prepared sealed envelopes. |
| Measured at baseline, 4 and 8 weeks. | No significant interaction between group and time. | Low risk: | High risk (downgrade 2) | Low |
Abbreviations: VAS Visual Analog Scale, ROM Range of mortion, QoL Quality of life, WORC Western Ontario Rotator cuff Index, CI Confidence intervals, ASES American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons Standardized Assessment Form-self reported scale, GPF Global Percentage of Function, GROC Global Rating of Change Scale, ER External rotation, VNS Verbal Numeric Scale, SDQ Shoulder Disability Questionnaire, FLEX-SF Flexilevel Scale of Shoulder Function, VNRS Verbal Numeric Rating Scale, NPRS Numeric Pain Rating Scale
Fig. 2Risk of bias summary. This graph illustrates the review authors assessment of each risk of bias domain for the six included studies. Review Manager (RevMan) 5.3 [44]
Fig. 3Risk of bias summary. This graph illustrates the review authors assessment of each risk of bias domain presented as percentages for the six included studies. Review Manager (RevMan) 5.3 [44]
Overall effectiveness of specific exercise strategy and best evidence synthesis across outcomes on short term
| Outcome | Inter-group effectivenessa | Best evidence synthesis |
|---|---|---|
| Pain | Yes (moderate [ | Insufficient (conflicting) evidence |
| Function | Yes (moderate [ | Insufficient (conflicting) evidence |
| General strength | Yes (moderate [ | Insufficient (conflicting) evidence |
| aScapular-stabilizers | Yes (moderate [ | Limited evidence |
| aProprioception and clinical tests | No (moderate [ | Insufficient evidence |
| Range of motion | No (moderate [ | No evidence |
a Statistical significant effect between groups in favor of specific exercise intervention
Fig. 4Data and forest plot illustrating results of specific exercise versus general exercise for short term pain during activity (4–8 weeks) [53–56]
Fig. 5Data and forest plot illustrating results of specific exercise versus general exercise for short term function (4–8 weeks) [53–57]
Database search formulas
| ᅟ | ᅟ |
| PEDro search formula | |
| #1) impingement | |
| Body part – upper arm, shoulder or shoulder girdle | |
| Method – trials | |
| #2) bursitis | |
| Body part – upper arm, shoulder or shoulder girdle | |
| Method – trials | |
| #3) tend@nitis | |
| Body part – upper arm, shoulder or shoulder girdle | |
| Method – trials | |
| Web of science search formula | |
| Timespan = All Years, Search language= Auto | |
| #1) TS = shoulder OR TS = scapula* OR TS = subacromial | |
| #2) TS = impingement OR TS = bursitis OR TS = Tend*nitis | |
| #3) TS = rehabilitation OR TS = physiotherapy OR TS = physical therapy OR TS = exercise OR TS = training | |
| #4) #3 AND #2 AND #1 | |
| #5) #3 AND #2 AND #1 Refined by: DOCUMENT TYPES: (CLINICAL TRIAL) | |
| PubMed search formula | |
| #1) “Search ((Shoulder) OR Scapula) OR Subacromial” | |
| #2) “Search (((Impingement) OR Bursitis) OR Tendinitis) OR Tendonitis” | |
| #3) “Search ((((Rehabilitation) OR Physiotherapy) OR Physical therapy) OR Exercise) OR Training” | |
| #4) “Search (((((Shoulder) OR Scapula) OR Subacromial)) AND ((((Impingement) OR Bursitis) OR Tendinitis) OR Tendonitis)) AND (((((Rehabilitation) OR Physiotherapy) OR Physical therapy) OR Exercise) OR Training)” | |
| #5) “Search (((((Shoulder) OR Scapula) OR Subacromial)) AND ((((Impingement) OR Bursitis) OR Tendinitis) OR Tendonitis)) AND (((((Rehabilitation) OR Physiotherapy) OR Physical therapy) OR Exercise) OR Training) Filters: Clinical Trial” | |
| Embase Search | |
| #1) ‘shoulder’/exp OR shoulder OR scapula OR ‘scapula’ OR ‘scapula’/exp OR subacromial | |
| #2) ‘shoulder impingement syndrome’/exp OR ‘shoulder impingement syndrome’ OR ‘impingement syndrome’/exp OR ‘impingement syndrome’ OR impingement OR brusitis OR ‘tendinitis’/exp OR tendinitis OR ‘tendonitis’/exp OR tendonitis | |
| #3) ‘rehabilitation’/exp OR rehabilitation OR ‘physiotherapy’/exp OR physiotherapy OR physical AND (‘therapy’/exp OR therapy) OR ‘exercise’/exp OR exercise OR ‘training’/exp OR training | |
| #4) #1 AND #2 AND #3 | |
| #5) #4 AND (‘clinical trial’/de OR ‘randomized controlled trial’/de) | |
| #6) #4 AND (‘clinical trial’/exp OR ‘clinical trial’ OR ‘randomized controlled trial’/exp OR ‘randomized controlled trial’) | |
| #7) #4 AND (‘clinical trial’/exp OR ‘clinical trial’ OR ‘randomized controlled trial’/exp OR ‘randomized controlled trial’) AND ([controlled clinical trial]/lim OR [randomized controlled trial]/lim) | |
| #8) #4 AND (‘clinical trial’/exp OR ‘clinical trial’ OR ‘randomized controlled trial’/exp OR ‘randomized controlled trial’) AND ([controlled clinical trial]/lim OR [randomized controlled trial]/lim) AND [embase]/lim | |
| Cochrane Library Search formula | |
| #1) shoulder or scapula or subacromial | |
| #2) impingement or bursitis or tendinitis or tendonitis | |
| #3) rehabilitation or physiotherapy or physical therapy or exercise or training | |
| #4) #1 and #2 and #3 | |
| #5) MeSH descriptor: [Shoulder] explode all trees | |
| #6) MeSH descriptor: [Scapula] explode all trees | |
| #7) MeSH descriptor: [Shoulder Impingement Syndrome] explode all trees | |
| #8) MeSH descriptor: [Bursitis] explode all trees | |
| #9) MeSH descriptor: [Tendinopathy] explode all trees | |
| #10) MeSH descriptor: [Rehabilitation] explode all trees | |
| #11) MeSH descriptor: [Physical Therapy Modalities] explode all trees | |
| #12) MeSH descriptor: [Exercise] explode all trees | |
| #13) MeSH descriptor: [Motor Activity] explode all trees | |
| #14) MeSH descriptor: [Physical Education and Training] explode all trees | |
| #15) #5 or #6 | |
| #16) #7 or #8 or #9 | |
| #17) #10 or #11 or #12 or #13 or #14 | |
| #18) #15 and #16 and #17 | |
| #19) #18 or #4 | |
| #20) #18 or #4 in Trials | |
Table of excluded studies
| Bae 2011 [ | Intervention not eligible: did not include resistance training in both groups. |
| Beaudreuil 2011 [ | Intervention not eligible: did not include resistance training in both groups. |
| Beaudreuil 2015 [ | Secondary analysis of Beaudreuil 2011. |
| Blume 2015 [ | Intervention not eligible: both groups received the same exercise program with different progression of repetition max. |
| Boeck 2012 [ | Intervention not eligible: passive control group. |
| Celik 2009 [ | Intervention not eligible: compares exercises performed above and below 90° of levation. |
| Cheng 2007 [ | Intervention not eligible: interventions includes many variables and it is therefore not possible to differentiate between which parameter causes a given effect. |
| Choi 2013 [ | Intervention not eligible: no information regarding the control group. |
| De Mey 2012 [ | Non-RCT. |
| Dickens 2005 [ | Intervention not eligible: passive control group. |
| Ginn 2005 [ | Intervention not eligible: does not include resistance training in both groups. |
| Hallgren 2014 [ | Intervention not eligible: did not include resistance training in both groups. |
| Holmgren 2012 [ | Intervention not eligible: did not include resistance training in both groups. |
| Jung 2012 [ | Non-RCT. |
| Krischak 2013 [ | Population not eligible: includes patients with full-thickness rotator cuff tears. |
| Kromer 2013 [ | Intervention not eligible: both groups received the same exercise program. The intervention group additionally received individualized physiotherapy. |
| Ludewig 2003 [ | Intervention not eligible: passive control group. |
| Marzetti 2014 [ | Intervention not eligible: neurocognitive training vs resistance training. |
| Morl 2011 [ | Intervention not eligible: a comparison of exercise apparatuses. |
| Mozey 2014 [ | Intervention not eligible: passive control group. |
| Østerås 2009 [ | Intervention not eligible: dose response trial focusing on number of repetitions, number of sets and time spent on performing global aerobic exercises. |
Abbreviations: RCT Randomized controlled trial
Table of ongoing studies
| Study | Methods | Participants | Intervention | Outcome measures | Start | Contact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turgut 2016 | RCT | Ages | Experimental | Primary Outcome Measures | Feb 2014 | •Elif Turgut, MSc 00903123052525 ext 186, elifcamci@hacettepe.edu.tr |
Abbreviations: RCT Randomized controlled trial, VAS Visual Analog Scale