| Literature DB >> 36250030 |
Vivek Pandey1, Ram Chidambaram1, Amit Modi1, Ashish Babhulkar1, Dinshaw N Pardiwala1, W Jaap Willems1, Jai Thilak1, Jitender Maheshwari1, Kush Narang1, Nilesh Kamat1, Prateek Gupta1, Raghuveer Reddy1, Sanjay Desai1, S R Sundararajan1, Swarnendu Samanta1.
Abstract
Background: The management of frozen shoulder (FS) differs depending on experience level and variation between scientific guidelines and actual practice. Purpose: To determine the current trends and practices in the management of FS among shoulder specialists and compare them with senior shoulder specialists. Study Design: Consensus statement.Entities:
Keywords: adhesive capsulitis; consensus; frozen shoulder; shoulder; survey; trend
Year: 2022 PMID: 36250030 PMCID: PMC9561673 DOI: 10.1177/23259671221118834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orthop J Sports Med ISSN: 2325-9671
The 26 Survey Questions Used in This Study
| Item | Question |
|---|---|
| 1 | What do you prefer to call “frozen shoulder”? |
| 2 | Are you aware of the ISAKOS definition of frozen shoulder? |
| 3 | Restriction of which movement is important to make a diagnosis of frozen shoulder? |
| 4 | Is plain x-ray of the shoulder a must once the clinical diagnosis of the frozen shoulder is established? |
| 5 | If plain x-ray is normal, is it important to ask for MRI to establish the diagnosis of frozen shoulder and rule out other conditions? |
| 6 | Given a choice, which is your preferred investigation of choice, USG or MRI to establish the diagnosis of frozen shoulder? |
| 7 | Do you know that USG can also be done to confirm the diagnosis of frozen shoulder? |
| 8 | Which is the screening blood test to rule out diabetes (if the patient is not a known case of diabetes) of your choice if patient is suspected to have frozen shoulder? |
| 9 | Do you routinely perform thyroid function test (at least TSH) in a woman with frozen shoulder? |
| 10 | Do you follow the 3 clinicopathological stages (freezing, frozen, and thawing) while treating your patient with frozen shoulder? |
| 11 | What time of the day do you prescribe NSAIDs/other analgesic in frozen shoulder? |
| 12 | If pain fails to respond to NSAIDs, what is the most preferred measure you take for pain relief? |
| 13 | Which is your preferred drug (with dose) and route/site for steroid injection? |
| 14 | Which one is your preferred method of local steroid injection? |
| 15 | How many steroid injections do you prefer to give? |
| 16 | Which is your preferred “pain-relieving physical therapy” modality to relieve moderate to severe pain in frozen shoulder? |
| 17 | Do you avoid passive mobilization measures in early phase of frozen shoulder? |
| 18 | Do you prefer to use hydrodilatation of shoulder in your practice while managing frozen shoulder? |
| 19 | If you perform hydrodilatation, what is the most optimal time you select to do it? (This question can be skipped by people who do not perform hydrodilatation.) |
| 20 | If patient fails to respond to conservative treatment, what do you prefer to perform (MUA/ACR)? |
| 21 | If you prefer to perform MUA/ACR in refractory frozen shoulder, what is the most optimal time to perform the procedure after the onset of frozen shoulder? |
| 22 | What percentage of your patients with frozen shoulder undergo MUA/ACR if conservative therapy fails? |
| 23 | In your practice, which procedure (MUA/ACR) has given better results as per your published/unpublished experience? |
| 24 | Have you ever encountered any complications of MUA (performed either by you or by other surgeon) such as fracture, cuff tear, etc? |
| 25 | Which was the most common complication you encountered with MUA (in your hands/by someone else)? |
| 26 | Do you think that patients with diabetes or hypothyroid fare poorly and take longer time to recover compared with nondiabetics or those with euthyroid condition? |
ACR, arthroscopic capsular release; ISAKOS, International Society of Arthroscopy, Knee Surgery and Orthopaedic Sports Medicine; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; MUA, manipulation under anesthesia; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; USG, ultrasonography.
Figure 1.Bar chart showing experience performing shoulder arthroscopy among the specialist surgeons who participated in the survey.
Figure 2.Bar chart showing shoulder arthroscopy surgeries performed per year by the specialist surgeons who participated in the survey.
Survey Results Concerning Terminology, Definition, Sign, and Investigations
| Group | Response |
|---|---|
| (1) Terminology of FS | |
| Specialist | Adhesive capsulitis (39.4%); frozen shoulder (16.2%); frozen shoulder or adhesive capsulitis (25.4%); periarthritis of the shoulder (4.9%); any terminology is acceptable (14.1%) |
| Faculty | Frozen shoulder (58.3%); adhesive capsulitis (25%); frozen shoulder or adhesive capsulitis (16.7%); periarthritis of the shoulder (0%); any terminology is acceptable (0%) |
| (2) Aware of ISAKOS definition of FS | |
| Specialist | Yes (67.6%); no (32.4%) |
| Faculty | Yes (83.3%); no (16.7%) |
| (3) Which movement restriction is important for diagnosis of FS? | |
| Specialist | Rotation (38.7%); abduction and rotation (31.7%); global (28.2%) |
| Faculty | Rotation (33.3%); abduction and rotation (33.3%); global (33.3%) |
| (4) Should plain x-ray be always asked after clinical diagnosis of FS? | |
| Specialist | Yes (75.4%); no (19%); only if doubt of secondary pathology (5.6%) |
| Faculty | Yes (75%); no (0%); only if doubt of secondary pathology (25%) |
| (5) If plain x-ray is normal, should routine MRI or USG be performed to confirm the diagnosis of FS? | |
| Specialist | No (35.9%); only if doubt of secondary cause (44.5%); yes, routinely (19.6%) |
| Faculty | No (66.7%); only if doubt of secondary cause (33.3%); yes, routinely (0%) |
| (6) Are you aware that USG can be performed to diagnose FS? | |
| Specialist | Yes (73.2%); no (26.8%) |
| Faculty | Yes (83.3%); no (16.7%) |
| (7) Among USG/MRI, which one should be used to diagnose FS if required? | |
| Specialist | MRI (85.2%); USG (14.8%) |
| Faculty | MRI (83.3%); USG (16.7%) |
| (8) Screening blood test of choice in patients with FS (RBS, RBS + HbA1c) | |
| Specialist | RBS and HbA1c (91%); only RBS (7.7%); do not do routinely until doubt (1.3%) |
| Faculty | RBS and HbA1c (50%); only RBS (8.3%); do not do routinely until doubt (41.7%) |
| (9) Do you perform TSH in a woman with FS? | |
| Specialist | Yes (38.2%); no (30.3%); only if doubt of condition (31.5%) |
| Faculty | Yes (33.3%); no (25%); only if doubt of condition (41.7%) |
FS, frozen shoulder; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; ISAKOS, International Society of Arthroscopy, Knee Surgery and Orthopaedic Sports Medicine; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; RBS, random blood sugar; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; USG, ultrasonography.
Survey Results Concerning Medical Practices to Manage FS
| Group | Response |
|---|---|
| (10) Do you follow the classic “freezing,” “frozen,” and “thawing” staging system for FS? | |
| Specialist | Yes (66.9%); no (19.7%); I do not believe in the staging system (13.4%) |
| Faculty | Yes (66.7%); no (16.7%); I do not believe in the staging system (16.7%) |
| (11) Timing of analgesics to be taken in FS | |
| Specialist | Night at bedtime (82.5%); time does not matter (5.5%); morning (8.5%); afternoon (3.5%) |
| Faculty | Night at bedtime (84.3%); time does not matter (13.3%); morning (2.4%); afternoon (0%) |
| (12) If pain fails to respond to NSAIDs, what should be added? | |
| Specialist | Steroid injection (83.1%); oral cortisone (3.5%); other (13.4%) |
| Faculty | Steroid injection (100%); oral cortisone (0%); other (0%) |
| (13) Preferred site, drug and dose for steroid injection | |
| Specialist | intra-articular (67.6%); subacromial (15.5%); TA 40 mg (58%); TA 80 mg (18.3%); MP 40 mg (14.1%); MP 80 mg (4.7%); I do not give injections at all (4.9%) |
| Faculty | intra-articular (66.7%); subacromial (33.3%); TA 40 mg (81.3%); TA 80 mg (6.3%); MP 40 mg (12.5%); MP 80 mg (0%); I do not give injections at all (0%) |
| (14) Preferred method of local steroid injection | |
| Specialist | Blind, using bony and soft tissue landmarks (77.5%); USG guided (16.9%); fluoroscopy guided (5.6%) |
| Faculty | Blind, using bony and soft tissue landmarks (83.3%); USG guided (16.7%); fluoroscopy guided (0%) |
| (15) How many steroid injections do you prefer to give? | |
| Specialist | Single shot only (50%); second shot repeated after 4-6 wk if there is no response to first injection (40.8%); 2-3 injections repeated after 2-3 wk (2.8%); no injections at all (6.3%) |
| Faculty | Single shot only (58.3%); second shot repeated after 4-6 wk if there is no response to first injection (41.7%); 2-3 injections repeated after 2-3 wk (0%); no injections at all (0%) |
| (16) Preferred pain-relieving physical therapy method (eg, SWD, IFT, US) | |
| Specialist | Leave it to physical therapist (28.9%); combination (27.5%); I do not believe in any hot/cold therapy (23.9%); US (13.4%); SWD (6.3%) |
| Faculty | Leave it to physical therapist (6.3%); combination (16.7%); I do not believe in any hot/cold therapy (75%); US (13.4%); SWD (6.3%) |
| (17) Do you prefer passive mobilization by physical therapist in freezing phase? | |
| Specialist | Yes (12.5%); no (87.5%) |
| Faculty | Yes (6.6%); no (93.4%) |
| (18) Do you prefer HD in treating FS? | |
| Specialist | No (76.1%); yes (23.9%) |
| Faculty | No (81.3%); yes (18.7%) |
| (19) If you perform HD, what is the timing? | |
| Specialist | Early frozen phase (66.1%); late frozen phase (22%); freezing phase (11.9%) |
| Faculty | Early frozen phase (100%); late frozen phase (0%); freezing phase (0%) |
FS, frozen shoulder; HD, hydrodilatation; IFT, interferential therapy; MP, methylprednisolone; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; SWD, short-wave diathermy; TA, triamcinolone; US, ultrasound; USG, ultrasonography.
Survey Results Concerning Surgical Practices and Prognostic Factors
| Group | Response |
|---|---|
| (20) Preferred surgical treatment option, MUA vs ACR | |
| Specialist | ACR (73.9%); MUA (10.6%); neither, just nonoperative treatment (15.5%) |
| Faculty | ACR (56.3%); MUA (6.3%); neither, just nonoperative treatment (37.5%) |
| (21) Most optimal time to perform ACR or MUA | |
| Specialist | 4-6 mo (40.8%); 7-9 mo (38.7%); 9-12 mo (16.2%); >12 mo (4.2%) |
| Faculty | 4-6 mo (50%); 7-9 mo (43.8%); 9-12 mo (0%); >12 mo (6.3%) |
| (22) What percentage of your patients undergo MUA/ACR if nonoperative treatment fails? | |
| Specialist | <5% of patients (57.7%); 5%-10% of patients (23.2%); 10%-15% of patients (8.5%); >15% of patients (10.6%) |
| Faculty | <5% of patients (68.8%); 5%-10% of patients (18.8%); 10%-15% of patients (6.3%); >15% of patients (6.3%) |
| (23) Which procedure in your practice has given better results as per your published/unpublished experience? | |
| Specialist | ACR (72.5%); MUA (7%); equivocal (20.4%) |
| Faculty | ACR (81.3%); MUA (6.3%); equivocal (12.5%) |
| (24) Have you encountered any complications after MUA? | |
| Specialist | Yes (47.2%); no (52.8%) |
| Faculty | Yes (62.5%); no (37.5%) |
| (25) Most common complication with MUA | |
| Specialist | Fractures of proximal humerus (26.1%); rotator cuff tear (20.4%); labral tear (4.9%) |
| Faculty | Fractures of proximal humerus (32%); rotator cuff tear (25.4%); labral tear (5.1%) |
| (26) Do you think that patients with diabetes or hypothyroid fare poorly and take longer to recover than those without diabetes or a euthyroid condition? | |
| Specialist | Patients with diabetes and hypothyroid fare poorly (87.3%); no difference between those without diabetes, hypothyroid vs other (12.7%) |
| Faculty | Patients with diabetes and hypothyroid fare poorly (92.3%); no difference between those without diabetes, hypothyroid vs other (7.7%) |
ACR, arthroscopic capsular release; MUA, manipulation under anesthesia.
Levels of Consensus Regarding Various Practices of FS
| Strong Agreement (>75%) | Broad Agreement (60%-74.9%) | Inconclusive (40%-59.9%) | Disagreement (<40%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Part A: Terminology, Definition, Signs, and Investigation | |||
|
▪ Plain x-ray is required after clinical diagnosis of FS to rule out an underlying secondary cause ▪ Routine MRI is not required if x-rays are normal ▪ Between MRI and USG, MRI is the investigation of choice, if one needs to be done | ▪ Routine TSH is not required to screen women with FS who are clinically euthyroid | ▪ RBS and HbA1c are the screening blood tests of choice in patients with FS who are normoglycemic |
▪ Terminology of FS (FS/AC/PA) ▪ Restriction of a particular movement important for the diagnosis of FS |
| Part B: Clinicopathological Stages and Medical Treatment | |||
|
▪ Analgesics to be taken at night in FS ▪ Steroid injection is the next step if there is no pain relief with analgesics ▪ Triamcinolone is the preferred injectable steroid drug ▪ Single-shot steroid, repeat after 3-4 wk if required ▪ The blind clinical technique is the preferred method of local steroid injection ▪ Avoid passive mobilization PT in the freezing phase ▪ HD is not a standard practice in FS treatment |
▪ Belief in classic clinicopathologic 3-stage system to treat FS ▪ An intra-articular injection is preferred over subacromial ▪ For steroid injection, 40-mg dose is preferred ▪ If performed, HD should be performed in the early frozen phase | ▪ None |
▪ Leave preferred pain-relieving PT method (SWD, IFT, US) to the physical therapist |
| Part C: Surgical Treatment and Prognostic Factors | |||
|
▪ <10% patients require surgical intervention ▪ Patients with diabetes and thyroid dysfunction fare poorly and take a longer time to recover | ▪ Clinical results of ACR are better than those of MUA |
▪ ACR is the preferred surgical treatment option in FS over MUA ▪ The optimal time to perform ACR or MUA (4-6 mo/7-9 mo) ▪ Possibility of complications during MUA | ▪ None |
AC, adhesive capsulitis; ACR, arthroscopic capsular release; FS, frozen shoulder; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; HD, hydrodilatation; IFT, interferential therapy; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; MUA, manipulation under anesthesia; PA, periarthritis shoulder; PT, physical therapy; RBS, random blood sugar; SWD, short-wave diathermy; TSH, thyroid-stimulating hormone; US, ultrasound; USG, ultrasonography.