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Outcomes after Arthroscopic Bankart Repair: First Time vs. Recurrent Dislocators

OBJECTIVES: The shoulder is the most common joint dislocation effecting roughly 2% of the general population. Males are effected to a higher degree that females at a ratio of 3:1.1-2 The young, athletic population make up the largest portion of shoulder instability, and treated nonoperatively have a...

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Autores principales: Marshall, Tyler James, Vega, Jose F., Siqueira, Marcelo BP, Gelber, Jonathan David, Cagle, Robert, Saluan, Paul M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4968327/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967116S00156
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author Marshall, Tyler James
Vega, Jose F.
Siqueira, Marcelo BP
Gelber, Jonathan David
Cagle, Robert
Saluan, Paul M.
author_facet Marshall, Tyler James
Vega, Jose F.
Siqueira, Marcelo BP
Gelber, Jonathan David
Cagle, Robert
Saluan, Paul M.
author_sort Marshall, Tyler James
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: The shoulder is the most common joint dislocation effecting roughly 2% of the general population. Males are effected to a higher degree that females at a ratio of 3:1.1-2 The young, athletic population make up the largest portion of shoulder instability, and treated nonoperatively have a recurrent dislocation rate approaching 50%.3-5 Owens et. al recently published a cohort looking at 45 college athletes with an in season shoulder instability event. 73% of athletes returned to play in season. Only 36% of athletes completed the season without re-injury and 64% of athletes had a recurrent instability event.6 It is unknown how the outcomes of those who go on to have a recurrent dislocation in season are effected versus those who have a stabilization procedure after a first time dislocation. The objective of the current study is to report the postoperative outcomes of first time dislocators versus patients with recurrent dislocations prior to surgery. METHODS: CPT codes were used to identify patients who had arthroscopic Bankart repair between 2003-2013. 439 patients aged 16-30 years were identified across 8 fellowship trained surgical practices. The first phase of the study was a retrospective chart review to obtain patient demographics, number of reported preoperative dislocations, review imaging, and number of anchors placed. Patients were identified as first time dislocators or as recurrent dislocators when they had more than one dislocation prior to surgical intervention. The second phase consisted of a survey to obtain a simple shoulder test score, whether they returned to sport, postoperative instability events and further surgery on the shoulder. Postoperative instability was defined as a subluxation or dislocation reported by the patient survey in the postoperative period. Of the 439 patients identified, 296 were excluded for revision surgery, open repair, posterior instability, multidirectional instability, HAGL lesion, labral tears involving the biceps anchor and refusal to participate. This left 144 patients eligible for the study. RESULTS: 121 patients participated for a follow up rate of 85% at an average of 51 months post surgery. There were 53 patients in the recurrent dislocation group and 68 in the first time dislocation group. The average age in both groups was 19yrs. The postoperative instability rate in the first time dislocator group was 9%. The postoperative instability rate in the recurrent dislocator group was 47%. This was statistically significant with p<0.0001. The first time dislocator group reported a 7% rate of repeat operation to address instability. The recurrent dislocator group reported a 32% rate of repeat operation to address instability. This was statistically significant with a p=0.0007. The Simple Shoulder Test (SST) score in the first time dislocator group was 11.4. The SST score in the recurrent dislocator group was 11. The difference was significant with p=0.037. CONCLUSION: First time dislocators had lower postoperative instability rates and reoperation rates when compared to patients with recurrent dislocations prior to surgical intervention. The SST scores were significantly different between groups. Young, athletic patients with shoulder instability should be offered early surgical intervention to lower the risk of postoperative instability and reoperation.
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spelling pubmed-49683272016-08-11 Outcomes after Arthroscopic Bankart Repair: First Time vs. Recurrent Dislocators Marshall, Tyler James Vega, Jose F. Siqueira, Marcelo BP Gelber, Jonathan David Cagle, Robert Saluan, Paul M. Orthop J Sports Med Article OBJECTIVES: The shoulder is the most common joint dislocation effecting roughly 2% of the general population. Males are effected to a higher degree that females at a ratio of 3:1.1-2 The young, athletic population make up the largest portion of shoulder instability, and treated nonoperatively have a recurrent dislocation rate approaching 50%.3-5 Owens et. al recently published a cohort looking at 45 college athletes with an in season shoulder instability event. 73% of athletes returned to play in season. Only 36% of athletes completed the season without re-injury and 64% of athletes had a recurrent instability event.6 It is unknown how the outcomes of those who go on to have a recurrent dislocation in season are effected versus those who have a stabilization procedure after a first time dislocation. The objective of the current study is to report the postoperative outcomes of first time dislocators versus patients with recurrent dislocations prior to surgery. METHODS: CPT codes were used to identify patients who had arthroscopic Bankart repair between 2003-2013. 439 patients aged 16-30 years were identified across 8 fellowship trained surgical practices. The first phase of the study was a retrospective chart review to obtain patient demographics, number of reported preoperative dislocations, review imaging, and number of anchors placed. Patients were identified as first time dislocators or as recurrent dislocators when they had more than one dislocation prior to surgical intervention. The second phase consisted of a survey to obtain a simple shoulder test score, whether they returned to sport, postoperative instability events and further surgery on the shoulder. Postoperative instability was defined as a subluxation or dislocation reported by the patient survey in the postoperative period. Of the 439 patients identified, 296 were excluded for revision surgery, open repair, posterior instability, multidirectional instability, HAGL lesion, labral tears involving the biceps anchor and refusal to participate. This left 144 patients eligible for the study. RESULTS: 121 patients participated for a follow up rate of 85% at an average of 51 months post surgery. There were 53 patients in the recurrent dislocation group and 68 in the first time dislocation group. The average age in both groups was 19yrs. The postoperative instability rate in the first time dislocator group was 9%. The postoperative instability rate in the recurrent dislocator group was 47%. This was statistically significant with p<0.0001. The first time dislocator group reported a 7% rate of repeat operation to address instability. The recurrent dislocator group reported a 32% rate of repeat operation to address instability. This was statistically significant with a p=0.0007. The Simple Shoulder Test (SST) score in the first time dislocator group was 11.4. The SST score in the recurrent dislocator group was 11. The difference was significant with p=0.037. CONCLUSION: First time dislocators had lower postoperative instability rates and reoperation rates when compared to patients with recurrent dislocations prior to surgical intervention. The SST scores were significantly different between groups. Young, athletic patients with shoulder instability should be offered early surgical intervention to lower the risk of postoperative instability and reoperation. SAGE Publications 2016-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4968327/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967116S00156 Text en © The Author(s) 2016 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This open-access article is published and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - No Derivatives License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/), which permits the noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction of the article in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. You may not alter, transform, or build upon this article without the permission of the Author(s). For reprints and permission queries, please visit SAGE’s Web site at http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav.
spellingShingle Article
Marshall, Tyler James
Vega, Jose F.
Siqueira, Marcelo BP
Gelber, Jonathan David
Cagle, Robert
Saluan, Paul M.
Outcomes after Arthroscopic Bankart Repair: First Time vs. Recurrent Dislocators
title Outcomes after Arthroscopic Bankart Repair: First Time vs. Recurrent Dislocators
title_full Outcomes after Arthroscopic Bankart Repair: First Time vs. Recurrent Dislocators
title_fullStr Outcomes after Arthroscopic Bankart Repair: First Time vs. Recurrent Dislocators
title_full_unstemmed Outcomes after Arthroscopic Bankart Repair: First Time vs. Recurrent Dislocators
title_short Outcomes after Arthroscopic Bankart Repair: First Time vs. Recurrent Dislocators
title_sort outcomes after arthroscopic bankart repair: first time vs. recurrent dislocators
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4968327/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967116S00156
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