Le traitement arthroscopique de l’epicondylalgie chronique préserve la proprioception du coude - 31/03/19
Arthroscopic chronic tennis elbow surgery preserves elbow proprioception
Abstract |
Study design |
Retrospective cohort study.
Introduction |
A new method of accurately assessing the compromised elbow's proprioception was developed for this post-surgical population using information from previous neurophysiologic proprioception studies of healthy elbows.
Hypothesis |
This retrospective cohort study investigated the patterns and the degree of proprioceptive impairment and recovery following arthroscopic surgery for chronic lateral epicondylitis.
Material and methods |
Participants had undergone arthroscopic elbow surgery two years prior to this study (n=15). Healthy, non-injured volunteers with similar demographics (n=15) served as controls. Both groups were evaluated using quantitative measures of joint position sense for proprioceptive functioning. In order to obtain the most accurate proprioceptive measurements, inter-individual interaction and visual input biases were eliminated. Retrospective chart reviews were performed to compare qualitative self-reported measures of proprioceptive function in arthroscopic surgery patients before surgery and two years post-surgery.
Results |
Active and passive joint repositioning outcome measurements were similar between groups (p>0.05). No significant differences were found among any angles except one: passive joint position sense at 120° of flexion (p<0.05). At this angle, the arthroscopy group showed greater deviation from target angles than the control group. The novel proprioceptive testing method we developed was found to be accurate and reliable.
Discussion |
Outcomes of arthroscopic treatment of chronic lateral epicondylitis with no decortication yielded outcomes measure similar to those of healthy controls. The sole significant difference was at 120° flexion passive joint repositioning, with a higher negative angular deviation from the target point. We propose that our study results and specific proprioception method may have implications for improving accuracy of future elbow arthroscopy and proprioceptive recovery in this population.
Level of evidence |
II, low-powered prospective randomized trial.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Chronic lateral epicondylitis, Elbow arthroscopy, Elbow proprioception
☆ | The study protocol was approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of the Suleyman Demirel University in Isparta, the Turkey. The authors certify that they have no affiliations with or financial involvement in any organization or entity with a direct financial interest in the subject matter or materials discussed in the article. |
☆☆ | This study was oral-presented at the 17th ESSKA Congress, 4–7 May 2017 held in Barcelona, Spain. |
☆☆☆ | Cet article peut être consulté in extenso dans la version anglaise de la revue Orthopaedics & Traumatology: Surgery & Research sur Science Direct (sciencedirect.com) en utilisant le DOI ci-dessus. |
Vol 105 - N° 2
P. 185 - avril 2019 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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