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Shoulder Function and Fatty Infiltration on MRI in Older Adults During Rehabilitation for Rotator Cuff Tear

Rotator cuff tear is highly prevalent in older adults, with supraspinatus tendon tear (STT) the most common. Shoulder rehabilitation is a major treatment strategy, but supraspinatus-muscle-fatty infiltration (FI) and shoulder function in older adults with rotator cuff tear primarily managed by physi...

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Autores principales: Davis, Derik, Almardawi, Ranyah, Awan, Omer, Lo, Lawrence, Ahmed, Sagheer, Jubouri, Shams, Gullapalli, Rao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8969068/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.3438
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author Davis, Derik
Almardawi, Ranyah
Awan, Omer
Lo, Lawrence
Ahmed, Sagheer
Jubouri, Shams
Gullapalli, Rao
author_facet Davis, Derik
Almardawi, Ranyah
Awan, Omer
Lo, Lawrence
Ahmed, Sagheer
Jubouri, Shams
Gullapalli, Rao
author_sort Davis, Derik
collection PubMed
description Rotator cuff tear is highly prevalent in older adults, with supraspinatus tendon tear (STT) the most common. Shoulder rehabilitation is a major treatment strategy, but supraspinatus-muscle-fatty infiltration (FI) and shoulder function in older adults with rotator cuff tear primarily managed by physical therapy (PT) is inadequately documented. We tested the hypothesis that older adults receiving usual-care PT when stratified by supraspinatus tear-status differ in supraspinatus FI [by quantitative Dixon fat fraction (FF) and semi-quantitative Goutallier grade (GG) on MRI] and shoulder function [by the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score (ASES-score)] over time. Longitudinal cohort study (pilot): adults 60-85 years, PT-cohort (n=15) and control-cohort (n=25). Participants completed both shoulder MRI and ASES survey at baseline and follow-up visits. Kruskal-Wallis test compared within cohort among 3 groups: no tear (no-STT), partial-thickness tear (pt-STT), full-thickness tear (ft-STT). Mann-Whitney U test compared equivalent groups between cohorts. Baseline PT-cohort groups differed for GG (p=0.033) [no tear, 0.50±0.50;pt-STT, 1.11±0.22;ft-STT, 1.50±0.50] without difference in age, BMI, comorbidity, or ASES-score. Baseline control-cohort groups differed for FF (p=0.034) [no-tear, 5.77%±1.16%;pt-STT, 7.14%±6.26%;ft-STT, 21.44%±10.44%], without difference in age, BMI, comorbidity, or ASES-score. Baseline no-tear groups for ASES-score (p=0.049) differed between cohorts: PT-cohort (58.87±8.21) versus control-cohort (83.98±21.89). Both cohorts showed no difference in Δ-FF or Δ-GG over time. PT-cohort groups differed for Δ-ASES-score over time (p=0.042)[no-tear, 16.65±4.69;pt-STT, -7.24±0.94;ft-STT, 4.48±3.45], but control-cohort groups did not (p>0.050). Our results suggest differences exist for supraspinatus FI and self-reported shoulder function among older adults receiving PT for rotator cuff tear when stratified by supraspinatus tear-status.
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spelling pubmed-89690682022-04-01 Shoulder Function and Fatty Infiltration on MRI in Older Adults During Rehabilitation for Rotator Cuff Tear Davis, Derik Almardawi, Ranyah Awan, Omer Lo, Lawrence Ahmed, Sagheer Jubouri, Shams Gullapalli, Rao Innov Aging Abstracts Rotator cuff tear is highly prevalent in older adults, with supraspinatus tendon tear (STT) the most common. Shoulder rehabilitation is a major treatment strategy, but supraspinatus-muscle-fatty infiltration (FI) and shoulder function in older adults with rotator cuff tear primarily managed by physical therapy (PT) is inadequately documented. We tested the hypothesis that older adults receiving usual-care PT when stratified by supraspinatus tear-status differ in supraspinatus FI [by quantitative Dixon fat fraction (FF) and semi-quantitative Goutallier grade (GG) on MRI] and shoulder function [by the American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons score (ASES-score)] over time. Longitudinal cohort study (pilot): adults 60-85 years, PT-cohort (n=15) and control-cohort (n=25). Participants completed both shoulder MRI and ASES survey at baseline and follow-up visits. Kruskal-Wallis test compared within cohort among 3 groups: no tear (no-STT), partial-thickness tear (pt-STT), full-thickness tear (ft-STT). Mann-Whitney U test compared equivalent groups between cohorts. Baseline PT-cohort groups differed for GG (p=0.033) [no tear, 0.50±0.50;pt-STT, 1.11±0.22;ft-STT, 1.50±0.50] without difference in age, BMI, comorbidity, or ASES-score. Baseline control-cohort groups differed for FF (p=0.034) [no-tear, 5.77%±1.16%;pt-STT, 7.14%±6.26%;ft-STT, 21.44%±10.44%], without difference in age, BMI, comorbidity, or ASES-score. Baseline no-tear groups for ASES-score (p=0.049) differed between cohorts: PT-cohort (58.87±8.21) versus control-cohort (83.98±21.89). Both cohorts showed no difference in Δ-FF or Δ-GG over time. PT-cohort groups differed for Δ-ASES-score over time (p=0.042)[no-tear, 16.65±4.69;pt-STT, -7.24±0.94;ft-STT, 4.48±3.45], but control-cohort groups did not (p>0.050). Our results suggest differences exist for supraspinatus FI and self-reported shoulder function among older adults receiving PT for rotator cuff tear when stratified by supraspinatus tear-status. Oxford University Press 2021-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8969068/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.3438 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Davis, Derik
Almardawi, Ranyah
Awan, Omer
Lo, Lawrence
Ahmed, Sagheer
Jubouri, Shams
Gullapalli, Rao
Shoulder Function and Fatty Infiltration on MRI in Older Adults During Rehabilitation for Rotator Cuff Tear
title Shoulder Function and Fatty Infiltration on MRI in Older Adults During Rehabilitation for Rotator Cuff Tear
title_full Shoulder Function and Fatty Infiltration on MRI in Older Adults During Rehabilitation for Rotator Cuff Tear
title_fullStr Shoulder Function and Fatty Infiltration on MRI in Older Adults During Rehabilitation for Rotator Cuff Tear
title_full_unstemmed Shoulder Function and Fatty Infiltration on MRI in Older Adults During Rehabilitation for Rotator Cuff Tear
title_short Shoulder Function and Fatty Infiltration on MRI in Older Adults During Rehabilitation for Rotator Cuff Tear
title_sort shoulder function and fatty infiltration on mri in older adults during rehabilitation for rotator cuff tear
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8969068/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.3438
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