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Clinical Assessment of Physical Examination Maneuvers for Superior Labral Anterior to Posterior Lesions

Purpose  Shoulder pain and disability pose a diagnostic challenge owing to the numerous etiologies and the potential for multiple disorders to exist simultaneously. The evidence to support the use of clinical tests for superior labral anterior to posterior complex (SLAP) is weak or absent. The purpo...

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Autores principales: Somerville, Lyndsay E., Willits, Kevin, Johnson, Andrew M., Litchfield, Robert, LeBel, Marie-Eve, Moro, Jaydeep, Bryant, Dianne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Thieme Medical Publishers 2017
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5629079/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29018839
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0037-1606829
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author Somerville, Lyndsay E.
Willits, Kevin
Johnson, Andrew M.
Litchfield, Robert
LeBel, Marie-Eve
Moro, Jaydeep
Bryant, Dianne
author_facet Somerville, Lyndsay E.
Willits, Kevin
Johnson, Andrew M.
Litchfield, Robert
LeBel, Marie-Eve
Moro, Jaydeep
Bryant, Dianne
author_sort Somerville, Lyndsay E.
collection PubMed
description Purpose  Shoulder pain and disability pose a diagnostic challenge owing to the numerous etiologies and the potential for multiple disorders to exist simultaneously. The evidence to support the use of clinical tests for superior labral anterior to posterior complex (SLAP) is weak or absent. The purpose of this study is to determine the diagnostic validity of physical examination maneuvers for SLAP lesions by performing a methodologically rigorous, clinically applicable study. Methods  We recruited consecutive new shoulder patients reporting pain and/or disability. The physician took a history and indicated their certainty about each possible diagnosis (“certain the diagnosis is absent/present,” or “uncertain requires further testing”). The clinician performed the physical tests for diagnoses where uncertainty remained. Magnetic resonance imaging arthrogram and arthroscopic examination were the gold standards. We calculated sensitivity, specificity, and likelihood ratios (LRs) and investigated whether combinations of the top tests provided stronger predictions. Results  Ninety-three patients underwent physical examination for SLAP lesions. When using the presence of a SLAP lesion (Types I–V) as disease positive, none of the tests was sensitive (10.3–33.3) although they were moderately specific (61.3–92.6). When disease positive was defined as repaired SLAP lesion (including biceps tenodesis or tenotomy), the sensitivity (10.5–38.7) and specificity (70.6–93.8) of tests improved although not by a substantial amount. None of the tests was found to be clinically useful for predicting repairable SLAP lesions with all LRs close to one. The compression rotation test had the best LR for both definitions of disease (SLAP tear present = 1.8 and SLAP repaired = 1.67). There was no optimal combination of tests for diagnosing repairable SLAP lesions, with at least two tests positive providing the best combination of measurement properties (sensitivity 46.1% and specificity 64.7%). Conclusion  Our study demonstrates that the physical examination tests for SLAP lesions are poor diagnostic indicators of disease. Performing a combination of tests will likely help, although the magnitude of the improvement is minimal. These authors caution clinicians placing confidence in the physical examination tests for SLAP lesions rather we suggest that clinicians rely on diagnostic imaging to confirm this diagnosis.
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spelling pubmed-56290792017-10-10 Clinical Assessment of Physical Examination Maneuvers for Superior Labral Anterior to Posterior Lesions Somerville, Lyndsay E. Willits, Kevin Johnson, Andrew M. Litchfield, Robert LeBel, Marie-Eve Moro, Jaydeep Bryant, Dianne Surg J (N Y) Purpose  Shoulder pain and disability pose a diagnostic challenge owing to the numerous etiologies and the potential for multiple disorders to exist simultaneously. The evidence to support the use of clinical tests for superior labral anterior to posterior complex (SLAP) is weak or absent. The purpose of this study is to determine the diagnostic validity of physical examination maneuvers for SLAP lesions by performing a methodologically rigorous, clinically applicable study. Methods  We recruited consecutive new shoulder patients reporting pain and/or disability. The physician took a history and indicated their certainty about each possible diagnosis (“certain the diagnosis is absent/present,” or “uncertain requires further testing”). The clinician performed the physical tests for diagnoses where uncertainty remained. Magnetic resonance imaging arthrogram and arthroscopic examination were the gold standards. We calculated sensitivity, specificity, and likelihood ratios (LRs) and investigated whether combinations of the top tests provided stronger predictions. Results  Ninety-three patients underwent physical examination for SLAP lesions. When using the presence of a SLAP lesion (Types I–V) as disease positive, none of the tests was sensitive (10.3–33.3) although they were moderately specific (61.3–92.6). When disease positive was defined as repaired SLAP lesion (including biceps tenodesis or tenotomy), the sensitivity (10.5–38.7) and specificity (70.6–93.8) of tests improved although not by a substantial amount. None of the tests was found to be clinically useful for predicting repairable SLAP lesions with all LRs close to one. The compression rotation test had the best LR for both definitions of disease (SLAP tear present = 1.8 and SLAP repaired = 1.67). There was no optimal combination of tests for diagnosing repairable SLAP lesions, with at least two tests positive providing the best combination of measurement properties (sensitivity 46.1% and specificity 64.7%). Conclusion  Our study demonstrates that the physical examination tests for SLAP lesions are poor diagnostic indicators of disease. Performing a combination of tests will likely help, although the magnitude of the improvement is minimal. These authors caution clinicians placing confidence in the physical examination tests for SLAP lesions rather we suggest that clinicians rely on diagnostic imaging to confirm this diagnosis. Thieme Medical Publishers 2017-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC5629079/ /pubmed/29018839 http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0037-1606829 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Somerville, Lyndsay E.
Willits, Kevin
Johnson, Andrew M.
Litchfield, Robert
LeBel, Marie-Eve
Moro, Jaydeep
Bryant, Dianne
Clinical Assessment of Physical Examination Maneuvers for Superior Labral Anterior to Posterior Lesions
title Clinical Assessment of Physical Examination Maneuvers for Superior Labral Anterior to Posterior Lesions
title_full Clinical Assessment of Physical Examination Maneuvers for Superior Labral Anterior to Posterior Lesions
title_fullStr Clinical Assessment of Physical Examination Maneuvers for Superior Labral Anterior to Posterior Lesions
title_full_unstemmed Clinical Assessment of Physical Examination Maneuvers for Superior Labral Anterior to Posterior Lesions
title_short Clinical Assessment of Physical Examination Maneuvers for Superior Labral Anterior to Posterior Lesions
title_sort clinical assessment of physical examination maneuvers for superior labral anterior to posterior lesions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5629079/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29018839
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0037-1606829
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