Results and limitations of humeral head resurfacing: 105 cases at a mean follow-up of 5 years - 21/04/17
Abstract |
Background |
The objective of this study was to assess clinical and computed-tomography (CT) outcomes at least 2 years after humeral head resurfacing to treat concentric gleno-humeral osteoarthritis.
Hypothesis |
Humeral head resurfacing provides similar outcomes to those achieved with stemmed humeral head implants.
Materials and methods |
This single-centre retrospective study included 40 Copeland™ and 65 Aequalis™ humeral resurfacing heads implanted between 2004 and 2012. Mean patient age at diagnosis was 64 years. The diagnoses were osteoarthritis with an intact (68%) or torn (21%) rotator cuff, avascular necrosis (5%), osteoarthritis complicating chronic instability (3%), post-traumatic osteoarthritis (2%), and chronic inflammatory joint disease (1%). Validated clinical scores, radiographs, and CT before surgery and at last follow-up were compared.
Results |
During the mean follow-up of 56 months, complications occurred in 24 implants. Revision surgery with reverse shoulder replacement was required in 18 cases, after a mean of 43.6 months, to treat glenoid wear or a rotator cuff tear. At last follow-up, for the implants that did not require revision surgery, the mean Constant score was 64/100. The implants had a mean varus of 5° and mean retroversion of −13.3°. The mean increase in glenoid cavity depth was 2.4mm. Mean increases in medial and lateral humeral offset were 1.9mm and 2.7mm, respectively. Pre-operative factors significantly associated with failure were rotator cuff tear (P=0.017) and glenoid erosion (P=0.001).
Discussion |
We found a high failure rate related to glenoid wear or progressive rotator-cuff impairment, although CT showed no evidence of implant malposition or overstuffing. Previous studies of stemmed humeral head implants showed better outcomes. Given the low medium-term prosthesis survival rate, we now reserve humeral head resurfacing for concentric osteoarthritis without glenoid erosions or rotator cuff damage.
Level of evidence |
IV, retrospective study.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Shoulder, Resurfacing, Humeral head implant
Plan
Vol 103 - N° 3
P. 415-420 - mai 2017 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.