1.Diagnosis and treatment of partial-thickness rotator cuff tears
Jian XIAO ; Guoqing CUI ; Jianquan WANG
Chinese Journal of Minimally Invasive Surgery 2001;0(02):-
Objective To discuss the diagnosis and treatment of partial-thickness rotator cuff tears.Methods A total of 14 cases of partial-thickness rotator cuff tears from April 1999 to January 2004 were surgically treated in this hospital.Before operation,X-ray examinations at anteroposterior view and at scapular outlet view were conducted in all cases,B-ultrasonography was conducted in 11 cases,and magnetic resonance imaging(MRI) or magnetic resonance arthrography(MRA),in 14 cases.Subacromial decompression and tear debridement was performed in 5 cases,while subacromial decompression and rotator cuff repair was performed in 9 cases.The University of California Los Angeles(UCLA) shoulder scoring system was used to evaluate the outcomes.Results The partial tears were identified at bursal-side in 7 cases and at articular-side in 7 cases.The 14 cases were followed for 1~6 years(mean,38 months).The UCLA scores were elevated from 15.9?3.9 preoperatively to 30.9?5.2 postoperatively(t=15.000,P=0.000).The curative results were classified as "good" in 13 cases and "poor" in 1 case.Conclusions Arthroscopy is a reliable method for the diagnosis of partial-thickness rotator cuff tears,which can be effectively treated with rotator cuff repairs.Arthroscopic repair gives little invasion and quick recovery.
2.Arthroscopic treatment of osteoarthrosis of the elbow in nonathlete patients
Hui YAN ; Guoqing CUI ; Jianquan WANG
Chinese Journal of Minimally Invasive Surgery 2001;0(02):-
Objective To assess the effectiveness of arthroscopic debridement techniques for osteoarthrosis of the elbow in nonathlete patients. Methods Twenty-six nonathlete patients with elbow osteoarthrosis were treated with arthroscopic debridement from January 1999 to January 2006.Of the 26 patients,23 were followed for 4~86 months (mean,23 months).All of the 23 patients had complained of pain and loss of elbow motion and 4 patients had symptoms of ulnar neuritis. The Mayo Elbow Performance Score was used as evaluation criteria of the efficacy. Results Twenty-three patients were followed for 4~86 months (mean, 23 months). Twenty elbows (87%) were not painful or were only mildly painful, and three (13%) were moderately painful. The mean arc of flexion-extension was improved from 99.6? (range, 65?~135?) preoperatively to 122.1? (range, 80?~150?) at the time of follow-up. According to the Mayo Elbow Performance Score, the result was excellent in 16 elbows, good in 4, and fair in 3, with a rate of excellent or good results of 87%. Symptoms of ulnar neuritis disappeared in the 3 patients and continued without aggravation in the remaining 1 patient. Fourteen patients were greatly satisfied with the results, 6 satisfied, and 3 unsatisfied, the satisfactory rate being 87%. One patient reported a delayed ulnar nerve symptoms after operation. Conclusions Arthroscopic debridement techniques for elbow osteoarthrosis in nonathlete patients can yield satisfactory pain relief, significant increase in the range of motion, and quick recovery.
3.Clinical value of helfet test in the diagnosis of meniscus injury
Jieying WANG ; Guoqing CUI ; Longxi REN
Orthopedic Journal of China 2006;0(20):-
[Objective]To study the accuracy of Helfet test in the diagnosis of the knee meniscus tear.[Method]From Apr.2007 to Oct.2007,52 cases of the lateral meniscus tear and 23 cases of the medial meniscus tear were checked-up with Helfet test,McMurray test ,KS test,and arthroscope comparatively.[Result]The Helfet Test was positive in most of the lateral meniscus tear cases.The consistency with McMurray test and arthroscope was lateral meniscus tear,especially to bucket-handle and Horizontal tear high respectively.The rate of accuracy to lateral menicus was 81.4%.The rate of accuracy to bucket-handle and Horizontal tear were 89.6% and 87.2% respectively.[Conclusion]The "Helfet" test is sensitive to the knee lateral meniscus tear.It is fast,simple,reliable,reproducible,positive for diagnose of lateral meniscus tear,and is worth of being used widely.
4.Clinical pathology of recurrent anterior dislocation of shoulder joint
Xi GONG ; Guoqing CUI ; Jianquan WANG
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2001;0(06):-
Objective To comprehensively know clinical pathological change of recurrent anterior dislocation of shoulder joint by arthroscopy. Methods 52 patients with recurrent anterior shoulder dislocation were inspected by arthroscopy in our institute, 38 cases were male, 14 cases were female; the mean age were 24.7, from 16 to 49 years old. 2 epilepsy patients were excluded, the other 50 cases were divided into two groups, the first group included 32 shoulder dislocated patients accompanied with shoulder hyper-laxity. The other group included 18 purely traumatic shoulder dislocated patients. All patients were explored by arthroscopy and all pathological changes were recorded and the difference of pathological change between the two groups were contrasted. Results 51 cases showed anterior-inferior labrum injury, 50 cases showed Hill-Sachs injury, 32 cases showed biceps-tendon inflammation or injury, 30 cases showed bone or cartilage injury of anterior-inferior glenoid, 29 cases showed SLAP injury, 7 cases showed rotator cuff injury. Anterior-inferior labrum injury: labrum abraded disappear was more occurred in pure traumatic group(P=0.055) and ALPSA injury was more in hyper-laxity group (59.4% to 38.9%, P=0.164). Bone or cartilage injury of anterior-inferior glenoid were more occurred in purely traumatic group(P=0.083, P=0.052). Hill-Sachs injury was more superficial or only cartilage injury in hyper-laxity group but wider and deeper in purely traumatic group. Conclusion The general pathological changes of recurrent anterior shoulder dislocation sucessively are: anterior-inferior labrum injury, Hill-Sachs injury, biceps-tendon inflammation or injury, bone or cartilage injury of anterior-inferior glenoid, SLAP injury and rotator cuff injury. The pathological changes of the hyper-laxity group were lighter than purely traumatic group.
5.Preliminary report on arthroscopic treatment for elbow injuries and diseases
Guoqing CUI ; Yingfang AO ; Changlong YU
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 1996;0(09):-
Objective To report the diagnostic and therapeutic effects of arthroscopic surgery on elbow sports injuries. Methods Nineteen patients with elbow diseases were treated by arthroscopic methods from January 1996 to February 2000. The modified HSS elbow rating scale was used as criteria of the efficacy. All patients were followed up for 4.5 months to 4.5 years (an average 8.6 months). Results Among nineteen patients, eleven had an excellent results, seven good, one poor, and satisfactory rate was 94.7 percent. Ten patients were satisfied greatly with the results,eight patients satisfied, one unsatisfied, the satisfactory rate was up to 94.7 percent according to the responses of questionnaire from the patients. The time resuming daily was in a medium of 7 days, and that for sports was in an average of 2.5 months. All the 11 cases of athletes and actors(actresses) resumed their previous seats. Complications occurred in 3 earlier cases, one had radial nerve temporary paralysis, the other two had residue loose bodies. Conclusion Elbow arthroscopic treatment is a reliable method with the advantages of minor trauma, quicker recovery and less traumatic manipulation. Careful pre-operative examination, selection of a safer portal of entry, and standard manipulation are very important points for the attainment of better results and less complications.
6.Arthroscopically Assisted Mini-Open Rotator Cuff Repair for Rotator Cuff Tears
Jian XIAO ; Guoqing CUI ; Jianquan WANG
Chinese Journal of Minimally Invasive Surgery 2005;0(08):-
Objective To study clinical results of arthroscopically assisted mini-open rotator cuff repair.Methods Twenty-two patients with rotator cuff tears were treated with arthroscopically assisted mini-open rotator cuff repair from March 1999 to March 2004.Thirteen patients underwent arthroscopic inspection,mini-open subacromial decompression,and rotator cuff repair.Nine patients underwent arthroscopic subacromial decompression and mini-open repair.The UCLA scoring system was used for outcome assessment.Results The 22 patients were followed for 12-72 months(mean,47 months).The UCLA scores were increased from 14.8?3.8 preoperatively to 32.0?4.7 postoperatively(t=15.086,P=0.000).The results were classified as excellent in 7 patients,good in 13 patients,fair in 1 patient,and poor in 1.Twenty patients were satisfied with the operative outcomes.Conclusions Arthroscopically assisted mini-open rotator cuff repair is an effective procedure for rotator cuff tears,with simplicity of performance and little invasion.
7.Tear of the long head of the biceps brachii tendon: evaluation with shoulder MRI
Chunyan TIAN ; Zhuozhao ZHENG ; Xuan LI ; Guoqing CUI
Chinese Journal of Radiology 2010;44(1):70-73
Objective To assess the diagnostic value of MRI for the long head of the biceps brachii tendon tear,and to compare the diagnostic efficiency between routing MRI and MR arthrography. Methods A retrospective study was conducted in 215 cases with shoulder MR examination (107 with MR arthrography, and 108 with routing MRI) and subsequent shoulder arthrescopy and surgery. Two radiologists analyzed all MR examinations independently, and the results were compared with those of arthroscopy and surgery. Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were calculated. Kappa values were used to quantify the interobserver agreement. Results Based on the results of arthroacopy and surgery, 215 patients comprised 7 cases of complete tear of the long head of the biceps brachii tendon, 29 cases of partial tear, and 179 cases without tear. The overall sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy for the diagnosis of tears (complete and partial tear) of the long head of the biceps brachii tendon were 72.2% (26/36), 91.6% (164/179), and 88.4% (190/215) respectively for observer 1, 80.6% (29/36), 93.8% (168/179), and 91.6% (197/215) respectively for observer 2. The interobserver agreement was good (Kappa value=0.681). For the complete tear of the biceps brachii tendon, the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were all 100% (7/7), 100% (208/208), and 100% (215/215) for both observers. For the tear of the long head of the biceps brachii tendon, the accuracy of MR arthrography were 93.4% (100/107) for observer 1 and 96.3% (103/107) for observer 2. They were higher than the Accuracy of routing MRI, which were 83.3% (90/108)and 87.0% (94/108) respectively for two observers (P<0.05). Conclusion Shoulder MRI is a moderate reliable method for evaluating the tear of the long head of the biceps brachii tendon, and the accuracy of MR arthrography is found to be superior to that of routine MRI.
8.Superior labrum anterior-posterior lesions on shoulder MR arthrography
Chunyan TIAN ; Zhuozhao ZHENG ; Xuan LI ; Guoqing CUI
Chinese Journal of Radiology 2010;44(6):630-634
Objective To evaluate the diagnostic value of shoulder MR arthrography for superior labral anterior-posterior (SLAP) lesions.Methods A retrospective study was conducted in 137 cases of shoulder MR arthrography confirmed by subsequent shoulder arthroscopy.Two radiologists analyzed all MR examinations independently and the results were compared with those of arthrescopy.The superior labrum was described as normal or torn.In addition, each iabral tear was classified as type Ⅰ-Ⅳ.Type Ⅰ lesions were defined as marked fraying of the articulating surface of the superior labrum; type Ⅱ, avulsion of the labral-bicipital complex from the ghnoid; type Ⅲ, displaced bucket handle tear of the superior labrum; and type Ⅳ, bucket handle tear of the superior labrum with extension into the fibers of the biceps tendon.Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were calculated.Kappa values were calculated to quantify the level, of inter-observer agreement.Results SLAP lesions were arthroscopically diagnosed in 59 of the 137 patients.Six of the 59 lesions ( 10.2% ) were classified as type Ⅰ , 50 (84.7% ) as type Ⅱ, and 3 (5.1% ) as type Ⅲ.The overall sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of MR arthrographic detection of SLAP lesions were 86.4% (51/59), 78.2% (61/78), and 81.8% ( 112/137), respectively, for observer A, and 88.1% (52/59), 84.6% (66/78), and 86.1% (118/137), respectively, for observer B.At inter-observer comparison, agreement was very good (Kappa values = 0.796 ).The MR arthrographic classification showed correlation with the arthroscopic classification of SLAP lesions were 83.1% (49/59)and 79.7% (47/59) for two observers, respectively.Conclusion Shoulder MR arthrography is a reliable method for evaluating SLAP lesions.
9.The Arthroscopy Treatment of Intra-articular Osteoid Osteoma: 7 Cases Report
Zhenming HE ; Guoqing CUI ; Gongzhou LIN ; Jian XIAO ; Yuelin HU
Chinese Journal of Sports Medicine 2010;(1):62-64
Objective To summarize the clinical experience of diagnosis and arthroscopic treatment of intratment of intra ular osteoid osteoma.Methods Seven patients(average 22.4 years old with range from 11~32 years)with intra-articular Osteoid osteoma who underwent arthroscopy treatment from March 2006 to June 2009 were studied respectively.Thin-section CT scanning was used to confirm diagnosis and determine surgery location.Results The time span between the appearance of clinical symptoms and confirmed diagnosis was 26.0 months on average(range from 18 to 36 months).At a mean 19-month follow-up,all patients showed significant improvements including VAS decrease,no recurrence,pain relief and normal range of motion.Conclusion The atypical clinical features and radiographic findings of osetoid osteoma might lead to the delayed diagnosis.Using arthroscopy to remove intro-articular osteoid ostema was a safe and effective way.
10.Arthroscopic subacromial decompression for subacromial impingement syndrome
Jian XIAO ; Guoqing CUI ; Jianquan WANG ; Jiakuo YU
Chinese Journal of Trauma 1990;0(03):-
Objective To explore the clinical results of arthroscopic subacromial decompression (ASD) for treatment of subacromial impingement syndrome. Methods Twelve cases with subacromial impingement syndrome from October 1998 to November 2003 were retrospectively studied. There was one case at degree Ⅰ, five at degree Ⅱ and six at degree Ⅲ according to Neer classification. Preoperative X-ray of obverse shoulder joint and outlet supraspinatus muscle was made. Seven cases was examined with ultrasonography and 10 with MRI or MRA. All cases were treated with arthroscopic subacromial decompression and arthroscopic acromioplasty and six cases underwent simultaneously arthroscopic suture of the rotator cuff. Results The follow up for 1-6 years (average 26 months) showed significant statistical difference upon preoperative UCLA score and postoperative UCLA score that were 16.9?4.0 and 32.5?1.4, respectively (t=-14.027,P﹤0.01). The results were excellent in two cases and good in ten. All cases were satisfied with the operation. Conclusions ASD is shown to be an effective procedure for subacromial impingement syndrome and has the advantages of minimal trauma and rapid postoperative recovery.