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Variability of glenohumeral positioning and bone-to-tendon marker length measurements in repaired rotator cuffs from longitudinal computed tomographic imaging

BACKGROUND: To address the need for more objective and quantitative measures of tendon healing in research studies, we intend to use computed tomography (CT) with implanted radiopaque markers on the repaired tendon to measure tendon retraction following rotator cuff repair. In our small prior study,...

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Autores principales: Jun, Bong-Jae, Sahoo, Sambit, Imrey, Peter B., Baker, Andrew R., Erdemir, Ahmet, Jin, Yuxuan, Iannotti, Joseph P., Entezari, Vahid, Ricchetti, Eric T., Bey, Michael J., Derwin, Kathleen A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7738576/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33345224
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jseint.2020.08.001
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author Jun, Bong-Jae
Sahoo, Sambit
Imrey, Peter B.
Baker, Andrew R.
Erdemir, Ahmet
Jin, Yuxuan
Iannotti, Joseph P.
Entezari, Vahid
Ricchetti, Eric T.
Bey, Michael J.
Derwin, Kathleen A.
author_facet Jun, Bong-Jae
Sahoo, Sambit
Imrey, Peter B.
Baker, Andrew R.
Erdemir, Ahmet
Jin, Yuxuan
Iannotti, Joseph P.
Entezari, Vahid
Ricchetti, Eric T.
Bey, Michael J.
Derwin, Kathleen A.
author_sort Jun, Bong-Jae
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: To address the need for more objective and quantitative measures of tendon healing in research studies, we intend to use computed tomography (CT) with implanted radiopaque markers on the repaired tendon to measure tendon retraction following rotator cuff repair. In our small prior study, retraction at 1-year follow-up averaged 16.1± 5.3 mm and exceeded 10.0 mm in 12 of 13 patients, and thus tendon retraction appears to be a common clinical phenomenon. This study's objectives were to assess, using 5 longitudinal CT scans obtained over 1 year following rotator cuff repair, the variability in glenohumeral positioning because of pragmatic variations in achieving perfect arm repositioning and to estimate the associated measurement variability in bone-to-tendon marker length measurements. METHODS: Forty-eight patients underwent rotator cuff repair with intraoperative placement of radiopaque tendon markers at the repair site. All patients had a CT scan with their arms at the side on the day of surgery and at 3, 12, 26, and 52 weeks postoperatively. Glenohumeral position (defined by the orientation and distance of the humerus with respect to the scapula) and bone-to-tendon marker lengths were measured from each scan. Within-patient variation in glenohumeral position measurements was described by their pooled within-patient standard deviations (SDs), and variation in bone-to-tendon marker lengths by their standard errors of measurement (SEMs) and 95% confidence level minimally detectable distances (MDD(95)) and changes (MDC(95)). RESULTS: The mean glenohumeral orientation from the 5 longitudinal CT scans averaged across the 48 patients was 12.6° abduction, 0.4° flexion, and –0.1° internal rotation. Within-patient SDs (95% confidence intervals) of glenohumeral orientation were 3.0° (2.7°-3.4°) in extension/flexion, 5.2° (4.6°-5.8°) in abduction/adduction, and 8.2° (7.3°-9.2°) in internal/external rotation. The SDs of glenohumeral distances were less than 1 mm in any direction. The estimated SEMs of bone-to-tendon lengths were consistent with a common value of 2.4 mm for any of the tendon markers placed across the repair, with MDD(95) of 4.7 mm and MDC(95) of 6.7 mm. CONCLUSION: Apparent tendon retraction of 5 mm or more, when measured as the distance from a tendon marker's day of surgery location to its new location on a volumetrically registered longitudinal CT scan, may be considered above the usual range of measurement variation. Tendon retraction measured using implanted radiopaque tendon markers offers an objective and sufficiently reliable means for quantifying the commonly expected changes in structural healing following rotator cuff repair.
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spelling pubmed-77385762020-12-18 Variability of glenohumeral positioning and bone-to-tendon marker length measurements in repaired rotator cuffs from longitudinal computed tomographic imaging Jun, Bong-Jae Sahoo, Sambit Imrey, Peter B. Baker, Andrew R. Erdemir, Ahmet Jin, Yuxuan Iannotti, Joseph P. Entezari, Vahid Ricchetti, Eric T. Bey, Michael J. Derwin, Kathleen A. JSES Int Shoulder BACKGROUND: To address the need for more objective and quantitative measures of tendon healing in research studies, we intend to use computed tomography (CT) with implanted radiopaque markers on the repaired tendon to measure tendon retraction following rotator cuff repair. In our small prior study, retraction at 1-year follow-up averaged 16.1± 5.3 mm and exceeded 10.0 mm in 12 of 13 patients, and thus tendon retraction appears to be a common clinical phenomenon. This study's objectives were to assess, using 5 longitudinal CT scans obtained over 1 year following rotator cuff repair, the variability in glenohumeral positioning because of pragmatic variations in achieving perfect arm repositioning and to estimate the associated measurement variability in bone-to-tendon marker length measurements. METHODS: Forty-eight patients underwent rotator cuff repair with intraoperative placement of radiopaque tendon markers at the repair site. All patients had a CT scan with their arms at the side on the day of surgery and at 3, 12, 26, and 52 weeks postoperatively. Glenohumeral position (defined by the orientation and distance of the humerus with respect to the scapula) and bone-to-tendon marker lengths were measured from each scan. Within-patient variation in glenohumeral position measurements was described by their pooled within-patient standard deviations (SDs), and variation in bone-to-tendon marker lengths by their standard errors of measurement (SEMs) and 95% confidence level minimally detectable distances (MDD(95)) and changes (MDC(95)). RESULTS: The mean glenohumeral orientation from the 5 longitudinal CT scans averaged across the 48 patients was 12.6° abduction, 0.4° flexion, and –0.1° internal rotation. Within-patient SDs (95% confidence intervals) of glenohumeral orientation were 3.0° (2.7°-3.4°) in extension/flexion, 5.2° (4.6°-5.8°) in abduction/adduction, and 8.2° (7.3°-9.2°) in internal/external rotation. The SDs of glenohumeral distances were less than 1 mm in any direction. The estimated SEMs of bone-to-tendon lengths were consistent with a common value of 2.4 mm for any of the tendon markers placed across the repair, with MDD(95) of 4.7 mm and MDC(95) of 6.7 mm. CONCLUSION: Apparent tendon retraction of 5 mm or more, when measured as the distance from a tendon marker's day of surgery location to its new location on a volumetrically registered longitudinal CT scan, may be considered above the usual range of measurement variation. Tendon retraction measured using implanted radiopaque tendon markers offers an objective and sufficiently reliable means for quantifying the commonly expected changes in structural healing following rotator cuff repair. Elsevier 2020-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7738576/ /pubmed/33345224 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jseint.2020.08.001 Text en © 2020 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Shoulder
Jun, Bong-Jae
Sahoo, Sambit
Imrey, Peter B.
Baker, Andrew R.
Erdemir, Ahmet
Jin, Yuxuan
Iannotti, Joseph P.
Entezari, Vahid
Ricchetti, Eric T.
Bey, Michael J.
Derwin, Kathleen A.
Variability of glenohumeral positioning and bone-to-tendon marker length measurements in repaired rotator cuffs from longitudinal computed tomographic imaging
title Variability of glenohumeral positioning and bone-to-tendon marker length measurements in repaired rotator cuffs from longitudinal computed tomographic imaging
title_full Variability of glenohumeral positioning and bone-to-tendon marker length measurements in repaired rotator cuffs from longitudinal computed tomographic imaging
title_fullStr Variability of glenohumeral positioning and bone-to-tendon marker length measurements in repaired rotator cuffs from longitudinal computed tomographic imaging
title_full_unstemmed Variability of glenohumeral positioning and bone-to-tendon marker length measurements in repaired rotator cuffs from longitudinal computed tomographic imaging
title_short Variability of glenohumeral positioning and bone-to-tendon marker length measurements in repaired rotator cuffs from longitudinal computed tomographic imaging
title_sort variability of glenohumeral positioning and bone-to-tendon marker length measurements in repaired rotator cuffs from longitudinal computed tomographic imaging
topic Shoulder
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7738576/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33345224
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jseint.2020.08.001
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