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261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Adhesive capsulitis is a problem for the orthopedic surgeon due to the difficulty of treatment. Although it is self-limited, few patients will wait for spontaneous resolutions while suffering pain and progressive loss of motion. Our aim was to modify the course of the disease and to shorten recovery time by combining intensive physiotherapy with intra-articular infiltration and gentle manipulation. 49 patients with 50 frozen shoulders were enrolled in the study. All patients were treated initially with physiotherapy for 4-8 weeks. If no improvement was noted the affected shoulder was infiltrated and gently manipulated. 27 of 49 patients (55%) improved dramatically with the initial physiotherapy regimen. They achieved full or nearly full range of motion, with significant relief of pain. 22 patients were infiltrated and manipulated. Elevation improved significantly from an average of 110.95 to 165.71 degrees (p < 0.001), external rotation from an average of 9.52 to 43.57 degrees (p < 0.001) and internal rotation also improved significantly (p < 0.001). Self assisted physiotherapy is the corner stone of treatment in adhesive capsulitis. When pain and limitation of passive range of motion persist, infiltration and gentle manipulation dramatically shortens the debilitating process.
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PMID:[Combined treatment for adhesive capsulitis of the shoulder]. 941 36

A case of a posttraumatic humeral shaft nonunion, after intramedullary stabilization with a Seidel nail, is presented. Severe osteoporosis, an oligotrophic nonunion, subclinical infection, and adhesive capsulitis of the glenohumeral joint were present. Due to the subclinical infection and severe osteoporosis, other major invasive therapeutic options such as intramedullary nailing or compression plating and bone grafting were not applicable. Nonoperative treatment was also not indicated secondary to the pain and disability present. External fixation with the Ilizarov hybrid fixator seemed to offer a minimally invasive treatment modality without the need of additional bone grafting. After fourteen weeks of "callus massage," consisting of closed alternating compression and distraction with an Ilizarov hybrid fixator, osseous consolidation was achieved. Eight months after Ilizarov treatment the patient had returned to work as a mechanic. At the one-year follow-up examination, the patient presented pain free and with near normal shoulder and elbow motion, with stable osseous consolidation of the humerus. In some cases of nonunion of the humerus shaft, when standard treatment options are not recommended, external fixation with an Ilizarov hybrid fixator may offer a salvage procedure with a successful clinical outcome.
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PMID:Nonunion of the humerus following intramedullary nailing treated by Ilizarov hybrid fixation. 950 5

Assessing both physical and mental health is necessary in clinical settings to quantify the scope of disability and to evaluate the effectiveness of treatment programs. Changes in health-related quality of life following physical therapy treatment for many patients with orthopaedic-related diagnoses is not known. The purposes of this study were to describe changes in health-related quality of life between the initial assessment and the time of discharge from physical therapy for the most common orthopaedic diagnoses and to compare the patterns of deficit among diagnostic categories. Patient outcomes in this study were evaluated from a large database generated by the Focus on Therapeutic Outcomes (FOTO) network. Health-related and employment outcomes were described for adult patients who were classified using ICD-9-CM codes. The most common orthopaedic diagnostic categories were sacroiliac sprain, back sprain, low back pain (radiating and nonradiating), neck sprain, neck pain (radiating and nonradiating), adhesive capsulitis of the shoulder, rotator cuff injury, shoulder sprain, knee dislocation, knee sprain, and knee derangement. The primary outcome measure was a 17-item questionnaire (the MOS-17) derived from the RAND 36-Item Health Survey (SF-36) and the 12-item Short Form Health Survey (SF-12). The comparison of each cohort to population norms was made by calculating a standard score on patient data adjusted for age and gender. An effect size was calculated to measure the change in health or employment status between the initial assessment and discharge from physical therapy. For all diagnostic categories, health-related quality of life with respect to norms and employment status showed a consistent pattern of improvement at the time of discharge compared with the initial assessment. There were only small changes in physical function for neck and shoulder diagnostic categories. Nearly all of the diagnostic categories had large reductions in bodily pain. The amount of clinical change in the physical components of health-related quality of life--especially the physical function and role physical domains--differed substantially across specific diagnostic categories. The largest improvements in the physical function occurred for patients with knee dislocation and knee sprain. Patients with knee dislocation also had the largest improvement in role limitations due to physical problems. The design of this study does not permit conclusions about the efficacy of physical therapy. Further study is needed to determine if the finding of different levels of health status improvement across diagnostic categories was due to the nature of the outcome measure, the type of treatments given to each patient, or other confounding variables, like depression or preinjury functional level.
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PMID:Physical therapy and health-related outcomes for patients with common orthopaedic diagnoses. 951 68

The SF-36 Health Survey is a patient self-administered general health status evaluation designed to measure the impact of disease on an individual's perception of his or her health. Five hundred forty-four patients with five common shoulder conditions (anterior glenohumeral instability (149 patients), complete reparable rotator cuff tear (111 patients), adhesive capsulitis (100 patients), glenohumeral osteoarthritis (67 patients), and impingement (117 patients)) completed the SF-36 Health Survey before undergoing treatment. When compared with U.S. general population norms, the patients with each of these shoulder conditions had statistically significant decreases in their health for Physical Functioning, Role-Physical, Bodily Pain, Social Functioning, Role-Emotional, and the Physical Component Summary as measured by the SF-36 Health Survey. Comparison with published data demonstrated that these shoulder conditions rank in severity (in terms of affecting a patient's perception of his or her general health) with five major medical conditions (hypertension, congestive heart failure, acute myocardial infarction, diabetes mellitus, and clinical depression). The data presented in this study should serve as a baseline to document the impact of shoulder musculoskeletal conditions and possibly to allow comparison among various methods of operative and nonoperative treatment.
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PMID:Self-assessment of general health status in patients with five common shoulder conditions. 965 47

Shoulder subluxation in hemiplegic patients has been recognized as a difficult problem to manage. In the study contained herein, our aims are to evaluate shoulder subluxation, to clarify if shoulder subluxation causes pain, and to discuss the treatment of shoulder subluxation. The study included 75 hemiplegic patients with shoulder subluxation. Each patient was evaluated for the degree of shoulder pain, motor recovery of the upper limb, and shoulder range of motion. Some indexes for evaluating subluxation were measured with radiographs of the shoulders. Arthrograms of the affected shoulder joint were taken in 23 patients. The following results were found: (1) shoulder pain was significant more frequently in left hemiplegia; (2) vertical disparity was strongly correlated with discrepancy of the descendant ratio; (3) severe inferior subluxation had a tendency to show medial displacement of the humeral head; (4) there were correlations between shoulder pain and shoulder range of motion, especially external rotation; (5) adhesive changes in the arthrograms were seen in most subjects. These results indicate that there is no relation between shoulder subluxation and pain, and adhesive capsulitis is a main cause of shoulder pain. We conclude that correct positioning and shoulder range of motion exercises are advisable in hemiplegic patients with shoulder subluxation.
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PMID:Evaluation and treatment of shoulder subluxation in hemiplegia: relationship between subluxation and pain. 979 35

Frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis) affects 2-5 per cent of the population, but is most common in the 40-60-year-old age group. The disorder is divided into three phases, the painful, the stiff and the recovery phases. In most cases the condition is self-limiting with negligible residual manifestations, though its average duration is about 30 months. New findings suggest frozen shoulder to be a Dupuytren-like disorder. Pain relief and physiotherapy are usually sufficient, but in more severe cases manipulation with the patient under anaesthesia, possibly combined with distension arthrography or arthroscopic release, may yield rapid improvement in shoulder function.
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PMID:[New knowledge of the mysterious "frozen shoulder". Surgical treatment can accelerate the recovery in more serious cases]. 985 71

This study is a comparison of treatments of idiopathic "Frozen Shoulder" (adhesive capsulitis), distension combined with steroid is compared with steroid alone. Evaluation was based on pain scales, analgesic usage, and range of motion outcome scales. Out of one-hundred twenty patients (age, mean 51, range 21-70) that were referred under the diagnosis FS, twenty-six fulfilled the criteria for inclusion in the study, but four patients did not want to participate in the trial, giving a total of 22 patients (age, mean 53, range 40-65) in the study. Patients were randomised by the envelope method. Two patients dropped-out, one in each treatment group thus leaving the study with 20 patients for the final statistical analysis. Eight were treated with steroid alone and 12 with distension combined with steroid. Patients received one treatment per week for a six weeks period with a follow-up at 12 weeks. They were evaluated by pain VAS on function and at rest within the study period, the different ranges of motion (ROM) were measured at inclusion time and subsequent afterwards at 3, 6, and 12 weeks. The VAS outcomes showed no difference between the treatments (VAS-function p=0,1; VAS-rest p=0.1), while in the distension group ROM showed significant improvement in all directions except extension (external p=0.0007, flexion p=0.03, extension p=0,01). The analgesic usage was significantly lower in the group treated with distension at the end of the study (p=0.008). A blinded clinical assessment of ROM also showed significant improvement (p=0.002). It is concluded that distension with steroid can seem to help in management of "Frozen Shoulder". Other studies seems to support the conclusion.
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PMID:Treatment of "frozen shoulder" with distension and glucorticoid compared with glucorticoid alone. A randomised controlled trial. 985 12

Long term effects of glenohumeral joint translational (gliding) manipulation on range of motion, pain, and function in patients with adhesive capsulitis were studied. Thirty-one patients underwent brachial plexus block followed by translational manipulation of the glenohumeral joint. Changes in range of motion and pain were assessed before manipulation with the patient under anesthesia, immediately after manipulation with the patient still under anesthesia, at early followup (5.3 +/- 3.2 weeks), and at long term followup (14.4 +/- 7.3 months). Passive range of motion increased significantly for flexion, abduction, external rotation, and internal rotation. Significant decreases in visual analog pain scores between initial evaluation and the followup assessments also occurred. Furthermore, Wolfgang's criteria score increased significantly between initial evaluation and followup assessments. Translational manipulation provides a safe, effective treatment option for adhesive capsulitis.
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PMID:Long-term effectiveness of translational manipulation for adhesive capsulitis. 991 83

To determine the efficacy of a combined treatment--namely hyaluronan and corticosteroid injection plus physical exercises in the management of established idiopathic capsulitis of the shoulder--30 consecutive subjects with adhesive capsulitis were selected for the study. The diagnosis of adhesive capsulitis was established on the basis of a clinical history of spontaneous shoulder pain, shoulder examination showing passive limitation in conformity with capsular pattern, cervical examination excluding significant dysfunction of this area, plain radiographs excluding other significant shoulder diseases, or sonographic examination showing capsule shrinkage in affected joint. The patients were randomly allocated to receive intraarticular injections of sodium hyaluronate (20 mg) plus steroid (20 mg triamcinolone acetonide) and physiotherapy or intraarticular injections of steroid (20 mg triamcinolone acetonide) alone and physiotherapy. The intraarticular injections were performed at 15-day intervals in the first month and then monthly for 6 months. Physiotherapy was performed for 4-12 weeks. The results indicate an improvement of pain and joint motion after 6 months in all patients, especially in the patients treated with sodium hyaluronate. Intraarticular hyaluronan combined with triamcinolone acetonide and shoulder exercises may improve adhesive capsulitis. This drug possibly acts on shoulder tissue retraction by means of its influence on osmotic pressure and synovial fluid volume control.
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PMID:Intraarticular injection of sodium hyaluronate plus steroid versus steroid in adhesive capsulitis of the shoulder. 1009 96

The repeatability and validity of a questionnaire for upper limb and neck complaints were assessed in a population of 105 hospital outpatients with a range of upper limb and neck disorders (including cervical spondylosis, adhesive capsulitis, lateral epicondylitis, carpal tunnel syndrome and Raynaud's phenomenon). Subjects were asked to complete a modified Nordic-style upper limb and neck discomfort questionnaire on two occasions closely spaced in time. The repeatability of their responses was assessed by calculating a kappa coefficient (kappa), and the sensitivity and specificity of component items in the questionnaire were determined for specific diagnostic categories of upper limb and neck disorder. Symptom reports for pain in the upper limb and neck, pain interfering with physical activities, neurological symptoms and blanching were all found to be highly repeatable (kappa = 0.63-0.90). A number of regional pain reports proved to be very sensitive in relation to specific upper limb disorders, but, with the exception of reported finger blanching in patients with Raynaud's phenomenon, none proved to have a good specificity (range = 0.33-0.38). We conclude that a modified Nordic-style questionnaire is repeatable and sensitive, and is likely to have a high utility in screening and surveillance. However a complementary examination schedule of adequate specificity and repeatability is essential to establish a clinical diagnosis.
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PMID:Repeatability and validity of an upper limb and neck discomfort questionnaire: the utility of the standardized Nordic questionnaire. 1045 98


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