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A questionnaire survey of UK physiotherapists on the diagnosis and management of contracted (frozen) shoulder

Nigel C A Hanchard, Lorna Goodchild, Jackie Thompson, Tracey O’Brien, Dot Davison, Chris Richardson
Key takeaways
  1. 01Diagnosis is often based on restricted passive external shoulder rotation
  2. 02Treatment differs for pain-dominant vs. stiffness-dominant phases
  3. 03Advice and gentle exercise are used for the painful phase
  4. 04Stretching and joint mobilization are used for the stiff phase
  5. 05Clinical practice may differ from research evidence

UK physiotherapists tailor frozen shoulder treatment based on whether pain or stiffness is the dominant symptom.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To gain insights into the diagnosis and management of contracted (frozen) shoulder (CFS) in a sample of UK physiotherapists, underpinning the development of evidence-based clinical guidelines. METHODS: An anonymous online questionnaire was developed and distributed via iCSP, targeting physiotherapists who treat CFS. For treatments, respondents were invited to consider 'pain-predominant' and 'stiffness-predominant' scenarios, choose from listed treatment options, and specify any unlisted conservative options they might consider. Frequency analysis was used for closed-ended questions, and content analysis was used for open-ended questions. RESULTS: In total, 289 valid responses were received. All respondents thought that movement restriction informed diagnosis. Of those specifying the manner of testing movements, 98% (121/123) included passive testing. Of those describing specific patterns of restriction, 71% (93/131) emphasised external rotation. Fifty-four percent (152/282) of valid respondents would consider suggesting/requesting imaging investigations, usually to exclude bony abnormalities. For treatment, only 46 respondents reported considering any unlisted conservative options, usually liaison regarding medication. For pain-predominant CFS, the preferred physiotherapeutic options were advice/education (96%; 277/288), injection (80%; 230/288), gentle exercise (79%; 228/288), superficial heat/cold (69%; 199/288) and acupuncture (68%; 196/288). For stiffness-predominant CFS, the preferred options were stretching (93%; 268/288), advice/education (88%; 252/288), joint mobilisations (87%; 250/288), function-based exercises (75%; 216/288) and hands-on soft-tissue techniques (59%; 170/288). Some dissociation was noted between clinical practice and research evidence. Eighty-five percent (253/284) of respondents would consider referring for an orthopaedic opinion. CONCLUSIONS: Acknowledging restricted passive external rotation (vs the capsular pattern) as diagnostic of CFS would standardise and might improve the clinical aspect of diagnosis. The value of X-rays in differential diagnosis was under-recognised. Modalities used to treat CFS were dichotomised by pain-predominant and stiffness-predominant classifications, which may be more useful than existing classifications.

Cite this study
APA
Nigel C A Hanchard, Lorna Goodchild, Jackie Thompson, Tracey O’Brien, Dot Davison, & Chris Richardson (2011). A questionnaire survey of UK physiotherapists on the diagnosis and management of contracted (frozen) shoulder. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/a-questionnaire-survey-of-uk-physiotherapists-on-the-diagnosis-and-management-of-contracted-frozen-shoulder/
MLA
Nigel C A Hanchard, et al. "A questionnaire survey of UK physiotherapists on the diagnosis and management of contracted (frozen) shoulder." 2011, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/a-questionnaire-survey-of-uk-physiotherapists-on-the-diagnosis-and-management-of-contracted-frozen-shoulder/.
Chicago
Nigel C A Hanchard et al. 2011. "A questionnaire survey of UK physiotherapists on the diagnosis and management of contracted (frozen) shoulder.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/a-questionnaire-survey-of-uk-physiotherapists-on-the-diagnosis-and-management-of-contracted-frozen-shoulder/