Reverse Surgical Solution For A Painful Shoulder
Main Category: Bones / OrthopedicsAlso Included In: Pain / Anesthetics; Arthritis / Rheumatology
Article Date: 25 Mar 2009 - 4:00 PDT
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3.56 (9 votes) |
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5 (2 votes) |
| Article Opinions: | 1 posts |
A few months ago, 63-year old Leona Carter could no longer use her right arm. She couldn't raise it, brush her teeth or get dressed.
The constant pain in her right shoulder was due to a massive and irreparable rotator cuff tear, along with severe arthritis. Her shoulder joint had worn out and the rotator cuff tendons in that shoulder were torn beyond repair. She put up with the pain as long as she could, but it eventually became unbearable.
A standard shoulder replacement, a decades old treatment for severe shoulder arthritis, would likely not have worked for her due to her deficient rotator cuff. However, a recently developed and radically different prosthesis, called a reverse total shoulder, offered the best chance of decreasing her pain and improving shoulder function.
"A normal shoulder is a ball-and-saucer joint, with its stability and motion governed to a large extent by the surrounding rotator cuff musculature," said Dr. Omer Ilhai, an orthopedic surgeon at The Methodist Hospital in Houston. "In arthritis, the smooth cartilage overlying and cushioning the surface of the bones is worn away, leaving rough, exposed bone surfaces to rub against each other. This bone-on-bone contact is very painful and usually associated with joint stiffness."
The reverse total shoulder takes a completely different approach to this condition, Ilahi said. In that procedure, the worn out saucer is actually replaced by a metal ball, whereas the worn out ball portion of the arthritic shoulder is replaced with a device that contains a large plastic cup. It turns out that replacing the saucer with a ball and the ball with a cup obviates the need for an intact rotator cuff to provide stability or motion.
Carter's shoulder pain decreased significantly and her function significantly improved.
"I'm just happy I can do my housework, feed myself, and do all the things I used to be able to do when my shoulder was healthy," Carter said. "The pain is gone and I can finally start enjoying life again."
Houston Methodist Hospital
6565 Fannin St.
Houston
TX 77030
United States
http://www.methodisthealth.com
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MLA
15 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/143572.php>
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Ball & Cuff Shoulder Replacement
posted by Aliene W. on 1 Apr 2009 at 6:50 amA rotor cuff injury is more common than the general public realizes. Two recent cases have had different results. The first: the specialist refused to operate because of the age of the patient - about 61 years old.
Getting this information to all practitioners could help. The patient has managed with careful activity to retain some use of the arm. The second: massive doses of Ibuprophen was prescribed over short period of time, allowing the muscles to heal.
Re-injury has happened. The blood vessels in the kidney area have been injured from the medication and the patient now is being treated for fgl with massive doses of prednisone. This case may not have qualified for the ball & cuff replacement, but it definitely draws attention to the need for further testing before prescribing massive doses of a pain-killer.
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