| Literature DB >> 29216919 |
Jonas Pogorzelski1, Knut Beitzel1, Francesco Ranuccio1, Klaus Wörtler2, Andreas B Imhoff3, Peter J Millett4, Sepp Braun1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The management of acute acromioclavicular (AC) joint injuries depends on the degree of injury diagnosed by the Rockwood classification. Inadequate imaging and not selecting the most helpful imaging protocols can often lead to incorrect diagnosis of the injury. A consensus on a diagnostic imaging protocol for acute AC joint injuries does not currently exist. Therefore we conducted a systematic review of the literature considering three diagnostic parameters for patients with acromioclavicular (AC) joint injuries: 1) Assessment of vertical instability; 2) Assessment of horizontal instability; 3) Benefit of weighted panoramic views.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29216919 PMCID: PMC5721483 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-017-1864-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Rockwood classification system for AC joint injuries
| Rockwood classification | Type I | Type II | Type III | Type IV | Type V | Type VI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AC ligaments | sprained | disrupted | disrupted | disrupted | disrupted | disrupted |
| CC ligaments | intact | sprained | disrupted | disrupted | disrupted | disrupted |
| Deltoid and trapezius muscle | intact | intact | detached from clavicle | detached from clavicle | detached from clavicle | detached from clavicle |
| Dislocation of the clavicle | none | AC joint widening, CC subluxation | AC joint dislocation, CC interspace 25–100% greater than compared to uninjured side | CC interspace may appear widened, clavicle horizontal unstable with posterior (sub-) luxation | AC joint dislocation, CC interspace more than 100% greater than compared to uninjured side | AC joint dislocation, clavicle displaced inferior to the coracoid |
Fig. 1Flowchart of the study selection process
Assessment of vertical instability
| Authors | Year of publication | Study design/level of evidence | Number of patients | Classification | Type of imaging | Results (according to classification of Landis/Koch [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kraeutler et al. [ | 2012 | Diagnostic study/IV | 28 | Rockwood | Anteroposterior and axial views: visual classification | Visual (ICC out of 8 investigators): |
| Cho et al. [ | 2014 | Diagnostic study/I | 28 | Rockwood | Bilateral plain anteroposterior and axial views: visual classification. | Bilateral plain anteroposterior and axial views: visual (ICC out of 10 investigators): |
| Schneider et al. [ | 2014 | Retrospective case series/IV | 58 | Rockwood | Bilateral panoramic stress and axial views: visual and digitally measured (CCI and HD) classification | Visual (range out of 4 investigators): |
| Gastaud et al. [ | 2015 | Diagnostic study/I | 15 | Rockwood | Bilateral comparative anteroposterior views (Zanca-view [ | Digitally measured CCI (range out of 4 investigators): |
| Schmid and Schmid [ | 1988 | Diagnostic study/IV | 22 | Tossy | Intra-operative findings vs. ultrasound | • Only Tossy III: 100% accordance in classification |
| Fenkl and Gotzen [ | 1992 | Diagnostic study/IV | 35 | Tossy | Weighted x-ray vs. ultrasound | • 97.2% accordance in classification |
| Matter et al. [ | 1995 | Diagnostic study/IV | 20 | Tossy | Weighted x-ray vs. ultrasound | • Ultrasound: |
| Kock et al. [ | 1996 | Diagnostic study/IV | 29 | Tossy | Weighted x-ray vs. ultrasound | • Ultrasound: |
| Iovane et al. [ | 2004 | Diagnostic study/IV | 18 | Rockwood | Weighted x-ray vs. ultrasound | • 100% accordance in classification (only Rockwood I – III) |
| Schaefer et al. [ | 2006 | Diagnostic study/IV | 13 | Rockwood | Non-weighted x-ray vs. mri | • 84.6% accordance in classification |
| Takase [ | 2011 | Diagnostic study/IV | 25 | Rockwood | Non-weighted x-ray vs. mri | • 92% accordance in classification |
| Nemec et al. [ | 2011 | Diagnostic study/IV | 44 | Rockwood | Non-weighted x-ray vs. mri | • 52.2% accordance in classification |
ICC = intraclass correlation coefficient, IeOR = inter-observer reliability, IaOR = intraobserver Reliability, CCI = coracoclavicular index, AC-width index = acromioclavicular-width index [10], D/A-ratio = vertical displacement of the clavicle9
Assessment of horizontal instability
| Authors | Year of publication | Study design/level of evidence | Number of patients | Classification | Type of imaging | Results (according to classification of Landis / Koch [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schneider et al. [ | 2014 | Retrospective case series/IV | 58 | Rockwood | Bilateral panoramic stress and axial views: visual and digitally measured (CCI and HD) classification | Digitally measured HD: |
| Vaisman et al. [ | 2014 | Diagnostic study/II | 40 | Rockwood | Introduction of the AC-width index | Width index of ≥60%: |
| Tauber et al. [ | 2010 | Diagnostic study/II | 25 | Rockwood | Introduction of the GACA | Cutoff value of 12.3°: |
| Gastaud et al. [ | 2015 | Diagnostic study/I | 15 | Rockwood | Bilateral comparative anteroposterior views (Zanca-view4), axial views and dynamic axial views (Tauber8-protocol): | Digitally measured X/Y-ratio: |
AC-width index = acromioclavicular-width index10, GACA = gleno-acromio-clavicular-angle8, IeOR = inter-observer reliability, IaOR = intraobserver Reliability, HD = horizontal dislocation
Requirement of weighted panoramic views
| Authors | Year of publication | Study design/level of evidence | Number of patients | Classification | Kind of imaging? Pro weighted or pro non-weighted? | Justification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bossart et al. [ | 1988 | Diagnostic study/IV | 83 | Tossy | Weighted vs. non-weighted bilateral comparative x-rays. | „use of weighted radiographs lacks efficacy in unmasking grade III AC sprains on radiograph “ [ |
| Ibrahim et al. [ | 2015 | Retrospective case series/IV | 59 | Rockwood | Weighted vs. non-weighted bilateral comparative x-rays. | “value of bilateral weighted views is to ‘unmask’ a grade V injury“ [ |
| Izadpanah et al. [ | 2013 | Diagnostic study/IV | 10 | Rockwood | Non-weighted x-ray vs. weighted x-ray and non-weighted mri vs. weighted mri | “application of stress (...) enables a partial rupture to be dis-tinguished from a complete ligamental rupture“ [ |