Immobilization in external rotation after primary shoulder dislocation reduces the risk of recurrence in young patients. A randomized controlled trial - 10/04/20
Abstract |
Introduction |
Patients that sustain anterior shoulder dislocation frequently experience recurrence. Immobilisation in external rotation has been proposed as a treatment that could lower this risk.
Hypothesis |
There is a difference in recurrence rates between immobilization in internal or external rotation following a first-time anterior shoulder dislocation.
Patients and methods |
Single-center randomized controlled trial. Fifty patients with a first episode of traumatic anterior dislocation were randomly assigned to immobilization in internal rotation (IR; 25 patients) or external rotation (ER; 25 patients) for three weeks. Clinical follow-up: 24 months. Additionally, some patients underwent a magnetic resonance imaging with intra-articular contrast (MR arthrography) within seven days after trauma, and then at three months. Primary outcome: recurrence of dislocation. Secondary outcome: healing rate of labral lesions on MR arthrography.
Results |
Follow-up rate in the IR and ER group was 92% and 96% respectively. Recurrence rate did not show a statistically significant difference overall (IR 47.8% vs. ER 29.2%; p=0.188), but showed a significant difference favouring ER in the 20–40 years subgroup (IR 50% vs. ER 6.4%; p=0.044). Labral lesions’ healing rate was 46.2% vs. 60% (IR vs ER; p=0.680). The recurrence rate among those with healed vs. non-healed labrum (regardless of immobilization) was 11.1% vs. 77.7% (p=0.001).
Discussion |
This study suggests that immobilization in ER compared to IR reduces the risk of recurrence after a first-time anterior shoulder dislocation in patients aged between 20 and 40 years.
Level of evidence |
II, low-powered prospective randomized trial.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : (MeSH) Shoulder dislocation, Conservative treatment, Randomized controlled trial, (Non MeSH) Internal rotation, External rotation, Recurrence
Plan
☆ | Clinical trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov (identifier NCT01111500). |
Vol 106 - N° 2
P. 217-222 - avril 2020 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.