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1.
JSES Int ; 5(6): 1077-1085, 2021 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34766088

RESUMO

HYPOTHESIS/BACKGROUND: Complications involving the fingers and hand after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (ARCR) include complex regional pain syndrome, carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), and flexor tenosynovitis (TS). The aims of this study were to diagnose the complications after ARCR and investigate the risk factors that could predispose individuals to these finger and hand complications. METHODS: Fifty patients (50 shoulders) who underwent ARCR participated in this study. The patients' ages ranged from 36 to 84 years (mean, 63 years). Before ARCR, we determined the disease history of the fingers and hand (CTS or TS) and subjectively assessed their symptoms using a questionnaire that included a scale ranging from 1 (no symptoms or no disability) to 5 (the worst symptoms or severest disability). ARCR was performed in all patients using suture anchors. The mean observation period after surgery was 15.5 months (range, 12-48 months). We diagnosed complications involving the fingers and hand after ARCR and investigated the preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative risk factors that could predispose patients to these complications using univariable and multivariable analyses. RESULTS: After ARCR, 20 patients (20 hands) (40%) had complications of the fingers and hand. Among them, the diagnosis was CTS in 2 hands, TS in 15 hands, and both CTS and TS in 3 hands. None of the hands exhibited complex regional pain syndrome. These complications occurred at an average of 1.8 months (range, 0.1-4 months) after ARCR. In the 47 patients who did not have symptoms just before the operation, both univariable and multivariable analyses between the complication group (n = 17) and the no-complications group (n = 30) showed a significant difference in the presence of a past history of CTS or TS (complication frequency: past history: 88%, no past history: 25%) (P < .05) and the preoperative subjective assessment for edema of the fingers and hand (complication frequency: edema ≥ 2 points: 89%, edema < 2 points: 24%) (P < .05). There were no relationships between the other candidate intraoperative and postoperative factors and complications. CONCLUSION: In all 20 hands with complications of the fingers and hand after ARCR, the diagnosis was CTS or TS. Complications of the fingers and hand after ARCR easily occurred in patients with a past history of CTS or TS and in patients with edema as per a subjective assessment. We speculate that the ARCR triggered the occurrence of CTS and TS postoperatively in patients who had subclinical CTS or TS before surgery.

2.
JSES Int ; 4(3): 612-618, 2020 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32939495

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Complications in the fingers and hand after arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (ARCR) have been reported to include carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), flexor tenosynovitis (TS), and complex regional pain syndrome. These studies were conducted retrospectively; however, the reported complications have not been examined prospectively. The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcomes of early detection and treatment of the complications after ARCR. METHODS: Forty-six patients (48 shoulders) who underwent ARCR were prospectively examined to investigate complications in the fingers and hand after ARCR. We attempted to immediately detect and proactively treat these complications. We evaluated the outcomes of the early detection and treatment of the complications. RESULTS: Complications were observed in 17 hands (35%) and occurred an average of 1.5 months after ARCR. The symptoms in 3 hands resolved spontaneously, 2 hands were diagnosed with CTS, and 12 hands were diagnosed with TS. Of the 12 hands with TS, 11 exhibited no triggering of the fingers. Among the 14 hands diagnosed with CTS or TS, 13 hands (CTS: 2 hands, TS: 11 hands) were treated with corticosteroid injections; the mean interval between treatment initiation and symptom resolution was 1.0 months (0.5-3.0 months). None exhibited complex regional pain syndrome. CONCLUSIONS: When symptoms occur in the fingers and hand after ARCR, CTS or TS should be primarily suspected. The diagnosis of TS must be made carefully because most patients with TS have no triggering. For patients with CTS or TS after ARCR, rapid corticosteroid injection administration can lead to improvement in these symptoms.

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