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      Arthroscopic Bankart versus open Latarjet as a primary operative treatment for traumatic anteroinferior instability in young males: a randomised controlled trial with 2-year follow-up

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          Abstract

          Objectives

          To compare the success rates of arthroscopic Bankart and open Latarjet procedure in the treatment of traumatic shoulder instability in young males.

          Design

          Multicentre randomised controlled trial.

          Setting

          Orthopaedic departments in eight public hospitals in Finland.

          Participants

          122 young males, mean age 21 years (range 16–25 years) with traumatic shoulder anteroinferior instability were randomised.

          Interventions

          Arthroscopic Bankart (group B) or open Latarjet (group L) procedure.

          Main outcome measures

          The primary outcome measure was the reported recurrence of instability, that is, dislocation at 2-year follow-up. The secondary outcome measures included clinical apprehension, sports activity level, the Western Ontario Shoulder Instability Index, the pain Visual Analogue Scale, the Oxford Shoulder Instability Score, the Constant Score and the Subjective Shoulder Value scores and the progression of osteoarthritic changes in plain films and MRI.

          Results

          91 patients were available for analyses at 2-year follow-up (drop-out rate 25%). There were 10 (21%) patients with redislocations in group B and 1 (2%) in group L, p=0.006. One (9%) patient in group B and five (56%) patients in group L returned to their previous top level of competitive sports (p=0.004) at follow-up. There was no statistically significant between group differences in any of the other secondary outcome measures.

          Conclusions

          Arthroscopic Bankart operation carries a significant risk for short-term postoperative redislocations compared with open Latarjet operation, in the treatment of traumatic anteroinferior instability in young males. Patients should be counselled accordingly before deciding the surgical treatment.

          Trial registration number

          NCT01998048.

          Related collections

          Most cited references47

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          Osteoarthritis cartilage histopathology: grading and staging.

          Current osteoarthritis (OA) histopathology assessment methods have difficulties in their utility for early disease, as well as their reproducibility and validity. Our objective was to devise a more useful method to assess OA histopathology that would have wide application for clinical and experimental OA assessment and would become recognized as the standard method. An OARSI Working Group deliberated on principles, standards and features for an OA cartilage pathology assessment system. Using current knowledge of the pathophysiology of OA morphologic features, a proposed system was presented at OARSI 2000. Subsequently, this was widely circulated for comments amongst experts in OA pathology. An OA cartilage pathology assessment system based on six grades, which reflect depth of the lesion and four stages reflecting extent of OA over the joint surface was developed. The OARSI cartilage OA histopathology grading system appears consistent and simple to apply. Further studies are required to confirm the system's utility.
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            The measurement of clinical pain intensity: a comparison of six methods

            The measurement of subjective pain intensity continues to be important to both researchers and clinicians. Although several scales are currently used to assess the intensity construct, it remains unclear which of these provides the most precise, replicable, and predictively valid measure. Five criteria for judging intensity scales have been considered in previous research: ease of administration of scoring; relative rates of incorrect responding; sensitivity as defined by the number of available response categories; sensitivity as defined by statistical power; and the magnitude of the relationship between each scale and a linear combination of pain intensity indices. In order to judge commonly used pain intensity measures, 75 chronic pain patients were asked to rate 4 kinds of pain (present, least, most, and average) using 6 scales. The utility and validity of the scales was judged using the criteria listed above. The results indicate that, for the present sample, the scales yield similar results in terms of the number of subjects who respond correctly to them and their predictive validity. However, when considering the remaining 3 criteria, the 101-point numerical rating scale appears to be the most practical index.
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              The instability severity index score. A simple pre-operative score to select patients for arthroscopic or open shoulder stabilisation.

              There is no simple method available to identify patients who will develop recurrent instability after an arthroscopic Bankart procedure and who would be better served by an open operation. We carried out a prospective case-control study of 131 consecutive unselected patients with recurrent anterior shoulder instability who underwent this procedure using suture anchors. At follow-up after a mean of 31.2 months (24 to 52) 19 (14.5%) had recurrent instability. The following risk factors were identified: patient age under 20 years at the time of surgery; involvement in competitive or contact sports or those involving forced overhead activity; shoulder hyperlaxity; a Hill-Sachs lesion present on an anteroposterior radiograph of the shoulder in external rotation and/or loss of the sclerotic inferior glenoid contour. These factors were integrated in a 10-point pre-operative instability severity index score and tested retrospectively on the same population. Patients with a score over 6 points had an unacceptable recurrence risk of 70% (p < 0.001). On this basis we believe that an arthroscopic Bankart repair is contraindicated in these patients, to whom we now suggest a Bristow-Latarjet procedure instead.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Br J Sports Med
                Br J Sports Med
                bjsports
                bjsm
                British Journal of Sports Medicine
                BMJ Publishing Group (BMA House, Tavistock Square, London, WC1H 9JR )
                0306-3674
                1473-0480
                March 2022
                22 September 2021
                : 56
                : 6
                : 327-332
                Affiliations
                [1 ] departmentOrthopaedics and Traumatology , Turku University Hospital , Turku, Finland
                [2 ] departmentFaculty of Medicine , University of Turku , Turku, Finland
                [3 ] departmentSurgery, Division of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery , Satakunta Central Hospital , Pori, Finland
                [4 ] departmentSurgery, Division of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery , Oulu University Hospital , Oulu, Finland
                [5 ] departmentOrthopaedics and Traumatology , Central Finland Central Hospital , Jyvaskyla, Finland
                [6 ] departmentOrthopaedics and Traumatology , Helsinki University Hospital , Helsinki, Finland
                [7 ] departmentOrthopaedics and Traumatology , Kuopio University Hospital , Kuopio, Finland
                [8 ] departmentOrthopaedic Unit, Tays Hatanpää Hospital , Tampere University Hospital , Tampere, Finland
                [9 ] Pohjola Hospital Tampere , Tampere, Finland
                [10 ] departmentDepartment of Radiology , Turku University Hospital , Turku, Finland
                [11 ] departmentAuria Clinical Informatics , Turku University Hospital , Turku, Finland
                Author notes
                [Correspondence to ] Dr Juha Kukkonen, Orthopaedics and Traumatology, TYKS Turku University Hospital, Turku 20521, Finland; jupeku@ 123456utu.fi
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-7691-5835
                Article
                bjsports-2021-104028
                10.1136/bjsports-2021-104028
                8899479
                34551902
                aa092128-1276-4a7c-a3bd-431219b59340
                © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.

                This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to copy, redistribute, remix, transform and build upon this work for any purpose, provided the original work is properly cited, a link to the licence is given, and indication of whether changes were made. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

                History
                : 17 August 2021
                Funding
                Funded by: Turku University Hospital Education and Research Foundation;
                Categories
                Original Research
                1506
                2314
                Custom metadata
                unlocked

                Sports medicine
                shoulder,sports medicine,trauma,upper extremity,orthopedics
                Sports medicine
                shoulder, sports medicine, trauma, upper extremity, orthopedics

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