โDead shoulders donโt tell us much, โ states Dr. Flatow. โMy argument stands, โ says Dr. Sperling. โTenotomy for repair of the subscapularis is simple, reproducible, and time efficient.โ
This weekโs Orthopaedic Crossfireยฎ debate is, โSubscapularis Tenotomy: Optimal Approach to Shoulder Replacement.โ For the proposition was John W. Sperling, M.D. from Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Against the proposition was Evan L. Flatow, M.D. of The Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York; moderating is Thomas S. Thornhill, M.D. of Harvard Medical School.
Dr. Sperling: โThe benefits of tenotomy are that it is simple, reproducible, and a time efficient method to provide a secure repair of the subscapularis. As for the challenges of the lesser tuberosity osteotomy, itโs a complex procedure. Itโs also possible to crush that metaphyseal bone during the procedure; fragmentation and a union of the lesser tuberosity are also possible.โ
โThe biomechanical literature comparing tenotomy and osteotomy shows one study of 24 cadaveric shoulders. The researchers found that there was no difference in maximum load to failure, stiffness, elongation amplitude, and cyclic elongation. Another study comparing the two involved nine paired cadaveric shoulders; they found that in the tenotomy group the cyclic displacement was 0.82mm; it was nearly double that (1.76mm) in the osteotomy group. The maximum load to failure was similar among the two groups. Another study on the clinical outcome of tenotomyโdone by Dr. Nevaiserโlooked at 45 patients who underwent a total shoulder arthroplasty, tenotomy and repair. The key for this was the protected postoperative motion. The results: 41 of 45 had a negative lift-off test; 45 of 45 had a negative belly-press test.โ
โAnother concern of osteotomy is fatty infiltration. In a study done by Gerber he looked at patients who underwent a shoulder arthroplasty with a lesser tuberosity osteotomy. He found a 44% rate of progressive fatty infiltrationโฆwithout an identifiable cause.โ
โThe complexity of an osteotomy, together with the concerns of non-union, fragmentation, fatty infiltration, and lack of evidence of superiority does not warrant changing from the proven technique of tenotomy.โ
Dr. Flatow: โIโm going to argue against doing a subscapularis tenotomy because the subscapularis is important and doesnโt like to be cut. Tendons donโt like to be cut and bone can take it! Subscapularis tenotomy, lengthening, and medialization are dangerous. Lesser tuberosity osteotomy allows solid fixation and reliable bone healingโฆand cadaver studiesโdead shouldersโdonโt tell you what happens with healing.โ
โWeโve been careless with the subscapularis; we used to say, โLook at the great external rotation patients have!โ Thatโs because there was nothing holding them back, and they couldnโt tuck in their shirt and couldnโt reach behind them. Now that we can get MRIs on them with special sequences, subscap insufficiency is common. And while patients still do pretty well, if someone has two shoulders, one side where the subscap works and one side where it doesnโt, they notice the difference.โ
โSubscapularis lengthening: we used to do it, but it shreds the subscapularisโฆit remains stuck to the rim, it over-lengthens the subscap because it isnโt a muscle problem, itโs a capsular problem. And when you medialize itโor take it off and move it mediallyโyou lose the lever arm. So an anatomical repair is the goal.โ
โIn our study with 41 patients we found that a lot of them had poor subscap function; they had difficulty tucking in their shirtโฆthey had a lot of things they didnโt like about their result if they had subscapularis problems. I had several cases of reoperating on a total shoulder at around two weeks: one person dislocated, another in whom we thought they may have had an infection and we put in a spacer and then came back when the cultures and path were negative. A good looking tendon at the time of surgery looks like jello. Hand surgeons know thisโฆthey donโt fix tendons two weeks after an injury, they wait until the right period. In old greater or lesser tuberosity fractures the tendons still look good when they had a piece of bone on them. And finally, bone healing may be better than tendon healing.โ
โI do a flake of bone of the lesser tuberosity with the take down of the subscapularis. I now do it with a double Krackow suture through bone tunnels tied over an endobutton to have secure fixation so that I donโt have to restrict them.โ
โHistorically, as weโve gotten better at lesser tuberosity fixation, you can see not only good motion, but good stomach press and active internal rotation. Rehab: we limit external rotation to 45 degrees in the first six weeks, and limit abduction/external rotation stretches until about the third month afterwards, and we try to get patients to avoid pushing up from a chair.โ
โIn a comparison that Joe Iannotti did looking at the ultrasonographic and radiographic evaluation, all the lesser tuberosity osteotomies healed and had higher Penn scores at one year versus tenotomyโฆand more abnormal subscaps in the tenotomy groupโฆand this is in living patients, not cadavers. We have reduced this after changing this approachโthis was before Krackow suturesโin terms of getting a negative belly press, and 83% had no difficulty tucking in a shirt. So for good subscapularis function, you must release the capsule; a lesser tuberosity osteotomy helps by giving you good bone healing; and you want to repair the subscapularis securely and anatomically, and protect it during early rehabโฆunless youโre a cadaverโthen a tenotomy works well. Thank you.โ
Moderator Thornill: โFatty infiltration is generally in the muscular part not the tendonous part. Would that sway you if there was any from doing a tenotomy?
Dr. Sperling: โNot necessarily. The main thing that sways me about the lesser tuberosity osteotomy is the increased complexity without firm data to show that itโs better biomechanically or clinically.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โEvan, in rheumatoids the proximal humerus is often bad. Do you do osteotomies in anyoneโwhat if you had a really osteopenic rheumatoid?โ
Dr. Flatow: โI donโt do them in rheumatoids, and I donโt typically do them in reverse shoulders because youโre making a more anteverted cut where you have a bigger risk that the cancellous surface of your cut is going to become confluent with the lesser tuberosity. The indication for me is a typical osteoarthritic shoulder where youโll make an anatomic cut and you have reasonable bone.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โWhat do you do in rheumatoids?โ
Dr. Flatow: โTenotomy.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โDo you limit external rotation?โ
Dr. Flatow: โYes, because they usually get their motion more gradually and itโs not as big an issue. In such a case I limit them to about 20 degrees for the first six weeks.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โDo you do a biceps tenodesis in all people with total shoulder?โ
Dr. Flatow: โYes.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โIf youโre doing a subscap osteotomy you pretty much need to take the biceps.โ
Dr. Flatow: โAre you psychoanalyzing me, Tom?โ
Moderator Thornhill: โIโve tried and Iโve found nothing.โ
Dr. Flatow: โI saved the biceps for 20 years doing total shoulders and never had problems. Then, so many people said it was a problem that I figured, โWell, if anyone gets pain theyโre going to blame it on the biceps.โ So I started taking them and it does make it easier to do a lesser tuberosity osteotomy.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โI pronounce you normal. Do you take the biceps?โ
Dr. Sperling: โYes. And I tenodese it high in the groove, and if the subscap is a little thin, if you make your cuff of tissue a little thin laterally you can reinforce that and grab the biceps tendon on the way out. So if the tissue, particularly a subscap, comes down lower it does peter outโthe tendonโso you can grab a portion of that if necessary.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โEvan, can you lengthen the subscap if youโre doing an osteotomy?โ
Dr. Flatow: โNot really.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โCan you move it proximally?โ
Dr. Flatow: โIf you take a flake of boneโwe donโt take a huge pieceโit will key in nicely if you put it back anatomically. So Iโve never tried to move it, Iโve always done an anatomic repair with this technique. The only time I would lengthen the subscap is if they had a previous shortening like an old Putti-Platt, but usually the contracture is all capsular, and Iโd just do an anatomic repair.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โDo you think one of the advantages of a tenotomy is that you can better manipulate it in moving it?โ
Dr. Sperling: โYesโฆ I agree with Evan, if someone has a prior instability procedure I would take it down through tendonโฆand you can medialize it. Thatโs one of the benefitsโyou have more flexibility in where youโre able to put the tendon back. Also, most people who do shoulder arthroplasty do one or two a year, so I think you can make this operation as complex or simple as you like. I like to keep it simple, so for me, a tenotomy is a simple way to do the procedure. I think a lot of it is the postoperative rehabilitation, so thatโs really an area of confusion. I have friends in the U.S.โpostop day oneโwho allow full active motion. Other people keep patients in a sling for six weeksโwith no motion. Evan, how has your rehab changed when you do a tenotomy versus a lesser tuberosity osteotomy?โ
Dr. Flatow: โIโm interested in your comment on making it complexโฆis cutting a bone more complicated that cutting a tendon, John? No, my rehab is the same. Iโm not sure that the Time 0 strength of the repairโwhat you would find in a cadaveric studyโis all that different. If I do a tenotomy I tend to do some Krackow sutures also, then I tunnel them under and tie them the same way. I just have tendon to tendon biology instead of bone to bone biology. So I donโt think it makes a differenceโif you avoid those very osteoporotic cases that Tom mentionedโI think itโs pretty much the same construct. And I limit all of them to about 40 degrees for the first six weeks.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โFinal statement, John?โ
Dr. Sperling: โThereโs no right or wrong answer in this regard. There are good arguments both ways.โ
Dr. Flatow: โThe right answer is my position.โ
Moderator Thornhill: โNot always informed, but never in doubt, right? Thank you both for a balanced discussion.โ
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