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Shoulder pain is a musculoskeletal system (MSS) disease that is frequently seen in adults and tends to become chronic. It ranks 3rd among MSS diseases after low back and knee pain. The main causes of shoulder pain are compression syndromes, acromioclavicular (AC) and glenohumeral joint degeneration, adhesive capsulitis, and biceps tendinopathy. Pathology may be in the joint, bone, muscle, tendon ligament, or bursa. Pain restricts the passive and active range of motion of the shoulder joint, impairing the quality of daily life and activity. It is thought to be between 20% and 50% in the adult population in a 1-year period, and its lifetime prevalence is approximately 10%. Central sensitization develops in cases where the pain is progressive and becomes chronic over time. It has been observed that it becomes chronic in more than 40% of patients in a 1-year period. Thus, shoulder pain becomes a biopsychosocial disease over time.
Physical therapy, medical, interventional methods, and surgery are applied in the treatment of shoulder pain. In physical therapy, exercises and some physical medicine modalities are applied to increase joint range of motion and reduce pain, while in medical treatment, oral analgesics, myorelaxants, and topical analgesics are used. Interventional intra-articular steroid injections and distal suprascapular nerve (SS) blockade radiofrequency applications are among the effective treatment options.
Full description
Patients over the age of 18 who have had chronic shoulder pain for more than 3 months, who could not achieve adequate pain palliation despite appropriate medical and physical therapy modalities, and who were treated with SS-PRF between June 2023 and June 2024 with clinical, radiological (MR) and physical examination will be retrospectively screened. The patients whose data can be accessed from the patient file will be recorded for age, gender, body mass index (BMI), duration of symptoms, painful side, pain etiology (subacromial bursitis, impingement syndrome, acromioclavicular degeneration, biceps tendonitis, labral pathologies, shoulder osteoarthritis, etc.), paracetamol dose, and procedure time. Procedure; The patient was taken to the procedure room, monitored [5-lead electrocardiogram (ECG), pulse oximetry, and noninvasive blood pressure], and a vascular access was established in the forearm. After obtaining appropriate sensory and motor responses with a 22 G 100 mm needle and nerve stimulator under ultrasonography guidance, a negative aspiration 5 ml 0.25% bupivacaine diagnostic block was performed with the patient in a semi-sitting position under sterile conditions. In patients who benefited 50% or more from the diagnostic block, a single session of 180 sec, 420 (2 Hz frequency, 45 V, 20 ms) SS-PRF was applied to patients who benefited 50% or more from the diagnostic block with a 100 mm long, 5 mm active tip radiofrequency needle under ultrasonography guidance in a semi-sitting position after obtaining appropriate responses from the suprascapular or spinoglenoid notch (shoulder external rotation and/or abduction).
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100 participants in 1 patient group
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halil ibrahim altun, specialist
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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