Glenohumeral Osteoarthritis
Aetiology
- Primary or secondary to:
- Trauma
- Instability
- Infection
- AVN
- Previous surgery – chondral damage, bioabsorbable anchors, LA pumps
Pathoanatomy
Bone
- Typical pattern is posterior glenoid erosion
- Results in retroverted glenoid
- 3 Types of glenoid:
- Concentric erosion of glenoid & no subluxation
- Posterior glenoid erosion, retroversion & subluxation
- Primarily Retroverted glenoid – posterior subluxations
- Humeral head flattening
- Humeral head posterior subluxation
Soft tissues
- Contracted anterior structures:
- Anterior capsule
- Subscapularis
- Lax posterior capsule from posterior subluxation
- Rotator cuff deficiency is rare in OA (5%)
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Aetiology
- Erosive Pannus & inflammatory cytokines cause bone & soft tissue disease
- 90% patients with RA have shoulder symptoms
Pathoanatomy
Bone
- Erosion is medial and concentric
- Humeral head retains its shape until very late stages
- Concentric joint space reduction
- Osteopenia, marginal erosions, and subchondral cysts
Soft Tissues
- Rotator cuff tears are more common:
- 75% will develop cuff pathology at some stage
- 25% full thickness tears at time of surgery
- Synovitis involving capsule, LHB
Classification
Neer – based on XR features
- Dry - Osteopenia, cyst formation, joint space narrowing
- Wet - Pointed appearance of humeral head, marginal erosions
- Resorptive - Severe medial erosion to level of coracoid
Avascular Necrosis
Aetiology
- Humeral head second most commonly affected after femoral head
- Primary: Idiopathic – unknown cause
- Secondary:
- Trauma
- Steroids
- Alcohol
- Sickle cell
- Gaucher’s, Caissons, SLE
Pathoanatomy
- AVN of humeral head affects superior middle region first
Blood Supply
- Primarily the Arcuate Artery as it enters bone
- Branch of Ascending branch of Anterior Circumflex Humeral
- Lies in lateral aspect LHB groove
- Secondarily from the Posterior Humeral Circumflex
- Runs over posteromedial aspect of humeral head
- Decreased blood flow causes ischemia > bone resorption > microfracture > subchondral collapse > secondary OA
- AVN may or may not have concurrent cuff pathology
Classification
Creuss
- No XR features
- Head Sclerosis
- Subchondral collapse (crescent sign)
- Humeral head collapse but no glenoid changes
- Humeral head & Glenoid OA changes
Crystal Arthropathy
- Gout:
- Deposition of Sodium Urate crystals
- Negative birefringence
- Pseudogout:
- Calcium Pyrophosphate crystals
- Positive birefringence
- Milwaukee shoulder:
- Calcium Hydroxyapatite crystal deposition
- Aspiration is blood-stained with debris
- Inflammatory cells and monocytes
- Positive staining with Alizarin red
Clinical Assessment of Shoulder Arthritis
History
- Pain, decreased mobility
- Weakness may be present if there is concurrent cuff tear
- History of other joint diseases
- Medications – DMARDs, Steroids
- Alcohol use
- PMH
Examination
- ROM
- Classically reduced/absent ER with GHJ OA
- Cuff assessment
- Deltoid function
- Concurrent upper limb arthritis (elbow in RA)
Imaging
- True AP of GHJ:
- Type of arthrosis, evidence of AVN, features of cuff tear
- Axillary lateral:
- Glenoid version, humeral head shape, subluxation
- CT scan:
- Pre-requisite pre-operatively
- Head shape
- Glenoid erosion pattern
- Degree of subluxation
- MRI Scan:
- If AVN suspected is essential
- If cuff tear suspected – especially for RA
Management Options for Shoulder Arthritis
Non-Operative
- Analgesia
- DMARDs
- GHJ steroid injections – long-term benefit limited – diagnostic value
- Activity Modifications
- Physiotherapy – little proven benefit
Surgical
Joint Sparing Procedures – more appropriate for young patients
- Arthroscopic debridement: Possible for very early arthritis
- Synovectomy: For RA arthroscopic – in early disease with minimal bone changes
- Soft tissue arthroplasty:
- Interposition of meniscus, fascia lata, etc., into glenoid for pain relief
- Some good results reported in young patients
- Unlikely to have any long-term benefit
- Cartilage Procedures:
- ACI, OATS have been reported for focal cartilage defects with some good results
- Limited studies in the shoulder
- Unlikely to work due to greater shear forces in shoulder from large ROM
- Procedures for AVN:
- Core decompression, vascularised grafting
- Core decompression does work in early AVN
- Limited literature for shoulder and even less for vascularised grafts
- Arthrodesis:
- An option for those with non-functional cuff or deltoid
- 30 degrees abduction, IR, and flexion is position of choice
Arthroplasty
- Humeral Head Resurfacing:
- Advantages for young patients – bone preservation
- Easier revision
- Less morbidity
- Feasible for AVN up to 50% involvement of head but safer up to 30%
- Hemiarthroplasty:
- An option for young patients
- Can be used if there is an irreparable cuff tear
- Problems: glenoid erosion and continued pain
- Total Shoulder Arthroplasty:
- Gold Standard treatment
- Glenoid Resurfacing contraindications:
- Inadequate bone stock
- Severe posterior erosion
- Severe medial erosion
- Rotator cuff deficient
- Outcomes:
- Superior long-term results to hemiarthroplasty
- Improved ROM
- Pain relief
- Complications:
- Glenoid loosening, wear, infection, instability, subscapularis failure
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