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      CT-based volumetric assessment of rotator cuff muscle in shoulder arthroplasty preoperative planning

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          Abstract

          Aims

          The aim of this study was to describe a quantitative 3D CT method to measure rotator cuff muscle volume, atrophy, and balance in healthy controls and in three pathological shoulder cohorts.

          Methods

          In all, 102 CT scans were included in the analysis: 46 healthy, 21 cuff tear arthropathy (CTA), 18 irreparable rotator cuff tear (IRCT), and 17 primary osteoarthritis (OA). The four rotator cuff muscles were manually segmented and their volume, including intramuscular fat, was calculated. The normalized volume (NV) of each muscle was calculated by dividing muscle volume to the patient’s scapular bone volume. Muscle volume and percentage of muscle atrophy were compared between muscles and between cohorts.

          Results

          Rotator cuff muscle volume was significantly decreased in patients with OA, CTA, and IRCT compared to healthy patients (p < 0.0001). Atrophy was comparable for all muscles between CTA, IRCT, and OA patients, except for the supraspinatus, which was significantly more atrophied in CTA and IRCT (p = 0.002). In healthy shoulders, the anterior cuff represented 45% of the entire cuff, while the posterior cuff represented 40%. A similar partition between anterior and posterior cuff was also found in both CTA and IRCT patients. However, in OA patients, the relative volume of the anterior (42%) and posterior cuff (45%) were similar.

          Conclusion

          This study shows that rotator cuff muscle volume is significantly decreased in patients with OA, CTA, or IRCT compared to healthy patients, but that only minimal differences can be observed between the different pathological groups. This suggests that the influence of rotator cuff muscle volume and atrophy (including intramuscular fat) as an independent factor of outcome may be overestimated.

          Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2021;2(7):552–561.

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          Most cited references54

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          Fatty muscle degeneration in cuff ruptures. Pre- and postoperative evaluation by CT scan.

          A preoperative computed tomography (CT) scan grading muscular fatty degeneration in five stages was done in 63 patients scheduled for repair of a torn rotator cuff. The results were compared with postoperative evaluation done after a mean of 17.7 months in 57 patients. Postoperative arthrographies were also performed in 56 patients. Preoperative CT scans demonstrated that infraspinatus fatty degeneration can occur in the presence of large anterosuperior tears even when the infraspinatus tendon is not torn; it worsens with time. The subscapularis rarely degenerates, and when it does it degenerates moderately, even when its tendon is not torn. After an effective surgical repair, moderate supraspinatus degeneration regressed in six of 14 patients; that of the infraspinatus never regressed but rather, increased, in three patients. One of these deteriorations, involving both supra- and infraspinatus, could probably be attributed to a partial subscapular nerve injury. Infraspinatus degeneration was correlated with functional pre- and postoperative impairment of active external rotation. Recurrence of infraspinatus tear was never observed, but recurrence occurred in 25% of supraspinatus repairs. Infraspinatus degeneration had a highly negative influence on the outcome of supraspinatus repairs. It seems preferable to operate on wide tears before irreversible muscular damage takes place.
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            Fatty infiltration and atrophy of the rotator cuff do not improve after rotator cuff repair and correlate with poor functional outcome.

            The role of degenerative changes in rotator cuff musculature with respect to the functional outcomes of rotator cuff repair have only recently been recognized and are still not well understood. In addition, the reversibility of these changes with repair of the tendons is questionable. Poorer preoperative muscle quality negatively affects outcome, and a successful outcome (in terms of a healed repair) might demonstrate improvements in fatty infiltration and muscle atrophy. Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2. Thirty-eight patients (mean age, 62 years) were prospectively evaluated with preoperative and 1-year postoperative clinical examination and appropriate magnetic resonance image sequencing to determine grades of muscle atrophy and fatty infiltration of the supraspinatus and infraspinatus muscles. American Shoulder and Elbow Society (ASES), Constant, and pain scores were determined as well as strength measurements. The retear rate and progression of muscle degeneration were also evaluated. Independent predictors of outcome measurements and cuff integrity were determined. The overall clinical outcome, including ASES, Constant, and pain scores, improved significantly (P < .0001). Strength in forward elevation improved significantly (P < .006), while external rotation strength did not. There was a strongly negative correlation between muscle quality and outcome results in most cases. When the results were adjusted for multivariate effect, muscle atrophy and fatty infiltration of the infraspinatus muscle were the only independent predictors of ASES and Constant scores (P < .03). Tear size and rotator cuff healing did not play an independent role. Tear size, however, was the only independent predictor of ultimate cuff integrity (P = .002). Both atrophy and fatty infiltration progressed significantly over the course of the study. In cases in which the tendon had re-torn, the progression was found to be more significant than when the repair proved successful (P < .003). Muscle atrophy and fatty infiltration of the rotator cuff muscles, particularly of the infraspinatus, play a significant role in determining functional outcome after cuff repair. Tear size appears to have the most influential effect on repair integrity. A successful repair did not lead to improvement or reversal of muscle degeneration and a failed repair resulted in significantly more progression. In general, healed repairs demonstrated minimal progression. These findings suggest that repairs should be performed, if possible, before more significant deterioration in the cuff musculature in order to optimize outcomes, and that understanding the degree of muscle atrophy and fatty infiltration before surgery can help guide patient expectations.
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              Fatty degeneration of the muscles of the rotator cuff: assessment by computed tomography versus magnetic resonance imaging.

              Forty-one patients scheduled for shoulder surgery underwent computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination of their affected shoulder to verify whether fatty degeneration of the rotator cuff muscles could reproducibly be assessed by CT or by MRI and whether the grading with the 2 methods was comparable. In addition, rotator cuff muscle cross-sectional areas were measured on parasagittal MRI scans to establish a possible correlation between rotator cuff muscle atrophy and fatty degeneration. Interobserver reproducibility for grading fatty degeneration was good to excellent for CT and for MRI. The correlation between MRI and CT was fair to moderate and remained unsatisfactory, even if the classification system was simplified with only a 3- rather than a 5-grade scale as originally proposed. The degree of fatty degeneration was significantly related to the amount of atrophy of the respective muscles.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Hospital Practitioner
                Role: Senior R&D Product Engineer
                Role: Professor
                Role: Professor of Orthopedic Surgery
                Role: Professor of Orthopedic Surgery
                Role: Vice President, Digital Technologies, Trauma & Extremities
                Role: Orthopedic Surgeon
                Journal
                Bone Jt Open
                Bone Jt Open
                bjo
                Bone & Joint Open
                The British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery (London )
                2633-1462
                28 July 2021
                July 2021
                : 2
                : 7
                : 552-561
                Affiliations
                [1 ] org-divisionHôpital Ambroise Paré , Boulogne-Billancourt, France
                [2 ] org-divisionLaboratory of Medical Information Processing , Brest, France
                [3 ] org-divisionWright Medical , Montbonnot, France
                [4 ] org-divisionTornier , Montbonnot, France
                [5 ] org-divisionRoth McFarlane Hand and Upper Limb Center , org-divisionSchulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University , London, Ontario, Canada
                [6 ] org-divisionCHRU de Tours , Tours, France
                [7 ] org-divisionImascap , Plouzané, France
                [8 ] org-divisionStryker , Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA
                [9 ] org-divisionCentre Orthopédique Santy , Lyon, France
                [10 ] org-divisionRamsay Générale de Santé , org-divisionHôpital Privé Jean Mermoz Lyon , Lyon, France
                Author notes
                Correspondence should be sent to Jean-David Werthel. E-mail: jdwerthel@ 123456gmail.com
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1123-1758
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7567-2651
                Article
                BJO-2-552
                10.1302/2633-1462.27.BJO-2021-0081.R1
                8329519
                34315280
                cc42a4ad-c292-4efa-a57f-1ca59cae81c0
                © 2021 Author(s) et al.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence, which permits the copying and redistribution of the work only, and provided the original author and source are credited. See https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

                History
                Categories
                Shoulder & Elbow
                Shoulder & Elbow, shoulder-elbow
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                $2.00
                Hopital Ambroise Paré, Boulogne-Billancourt, France
                Shoulder & Elbow
                J-D. Werthel receives royalties for shoulder prosthesis design from FH Orthopedics, which is related to this work. L. Favard, G. Walch, and G. Athwal receive royalties for shoulder prosthesis design from Wright Medical, which is also related to this article. F. Boux de Casson is Wright Medical employee, and J. Chaoui owns stocks and stock options from Wright Medical, both of which are unrelated.

                rotator cuff muscle,muscle volume,3d ct scan,atrophy,fatty infiltration,volumetric analysis,tangent sign,occupation ratio,shoulder arthroplasty

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