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Korrelationer mellan fynd vid magnetresonanstomografi och klinisk symptomsvårighetsgrad och prognos för frusen skuldra

Jong Pil Yoon, Seok Won Chung, Byung Joo Lee, Hyung Sup Kim, Jae Hyuck Yi, Hyun‑Joo Lee, Won‑Ju Jeong, Sung Gyu Moon, Kyung‑Soo Oh, Seok Tae Yoon
Nyckelinsikter
  1. 01Inflammation i ledkapseln på MR kan spegla aktuell symtomgrad
  2. 02Förtjockning i rotatorintervallet var kopplat till nedsatt utåtrotation
  3. 03MR-fynden förutsåg inte resultatet efter sex månader
  4. 04Klinisk bedömning är avgörande för prognos och behandling

MR-fynd vid frusen skuldra kan spegla aktuell symtomgrad men förutsäger inte det långsiktiga resultatet eller behovet av specifik behandling.

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the correlation between indirect magnetic resonance (MR) arthrographic imaging findings and the clinical symptoms and prognosis of patients with frozen shoulder.

Methods: Indirect MR arthrography was performed for 52 patients with primary frozen shoulder (mean age 55.1 ± 9.0 years) and 52 individuals without frozen shoulder (mean age 53.1 ± 10.7 years); capsular thickening and enhancement of the axillary recess as well as soft tissue thickening of the rotator interval were evaluated. Clinical symptom severity was assessed using the Visual Analogue Scale for Pain (VAS Pain), simple shoulder test (SST), Constant score, American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons (ASES) score, and range of motion (ROM). At 6-month follow-up, we evaluated whether MR arthrography findings correlated with the clinical symptoms and prognosis.

Results: Capsular thickening and enhancement of the axillary recess as well as soft tissue thickening of the rotator interval were significantly greater in the patient group than in the controls (p < 0.001). Capsular thickening of the axillary recess did not correlate with clinical symptoms or ROM (n.s.); however, capsular enhancement correlated with clinical symptom severity according to VAS Pain (p = 0.005), SST (p = 0.046), and ASES scores (p = 0.009). Soft tissue thickening of the rotator interval did not correlate with clinical symptom severity, but was associated with external rotation limitation (p = 0.002). However, none of the parameters correlated with clinical symptoms at 6-month follow-up.

Conclusions: Indirect MR arthrography provided ancillary findings, especially with capsular enhancement, for evaluating clinical symptom severity of frozen shoulder, but did not reflect the prognosis. MR findings in frozen shoulder should not replace clinical judgments regarding further prognosis and treatment decisions.

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APA
Jong Pil Yoon, Seok Won Chung, Byung Joo Lee, Hyung Sup Kim, Jae Hyuck Yi, Hyun‑Joo Lee, Won‑Ju Jeong, Sung Gyu Moon, Kyung‑Soo Oh, & Seok Tae Yoon (2017). Korrelationer mellan fynd vid magnetresonanstomografi och klinisk symptomsvårighetsgrad och prognos för frusen skuldra. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/correlations-of-magnetic-resonance-imaging-findings-with-clinical-symptom-severity-and-prognosis-of-frozen-shoulder/
MLA
Jong Pil Yoon, et al. "Korrelationer mellan fynd vid magnetresonanstomografi och klinisk symptomsvårighetsgrad och prognos för frusen skuldra." 2017, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/correlations-of-magnetic-resonance-imaging-findings-with-clinical-symptom-severity-and-prognosis-of-frozen-shoulder/.
Chicago
Jong Pil Yoon et al. 2017. "Korrelationer mellan fynd vid magnetresonanstomografi och klinisk symptomsvårighetsgrad och prognos för frusen skuldra.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/correlations-of-magnetic-resonance-imaging-findings-with-clinical-symptom-severity-and-prognosis-of-frozen-shoulder/