Litcius/Paper detail

How to treat stiffness after proximal humeral fractures?

J. Tomás Rojas, Mustafa S. Rashid, Matthias A. Zumstein

2023EFORT Open Reviews13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Shoulder stiffness is a frequent complication after proximal humeral fractures treated with or without surgery. Shoulder stiffness is associated with high rates of absence from work and a significant financial burden for the healthcare system. Secondary stiffness is characterized by additional extracapsular adhesions, including subacromial, subcoracoid, and subdeltoid spaces, usually derived from post-fracture or post-surgical extraarticular hematomas. Several secondary causes may coexist with capsular and extracapsular adhesions decreasing the shoulder motion, such as malunion, nonunion, metalwork failure, infection, and osteoarthritis, among others. Conservative treatment, usually prescribed for primary shoulder stiffness, has shown unfavorable results in secondary stiffness, and surgical intervention may be required. Surgical interventions need to be patient-specific. Usually, open or arthroscopic fibro-arthrolysis and subacromial release are performed, together with plate removal and biceps tenotomy/tenodesis. In severe osteoarthritis, shoulder replacement may be indicated. Ruling out infection is recommended in every case.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineTenotomyNonunionMalunionSurgeryOsteoarthritisRotator cuffComplicationTendonPathologyAlternative medicineShoulder Injury and TreatmentShoulder and Clavicle InjuriesTrauma Management and Diagnosis