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Post-operative Mobilisation After Rotator Cuff Repair

L

La Tour Hospital

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Rotator Cuff

Treatments

Procedure: Rotator cuff repair

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02943005
2016-00818

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of this study is to compare rehabilitation with the wearing of a sling, to rehabilitation without any immobilization after an arthroscopic repair of the supraspinatus tendon. The goal is to offer to patients a simplified rehabilitation management, with a faster recovery, less pain and a quicker return to normal life.

Full description

Rotator cuff tear is a frequent problem, increasing with age1. Thus arthroscopic repair is a frequent surgery. Despite this important number of cuff repair, the re-tear rate varies from 20 to 90% depending on tear severity and type of repair1,2. Many factors are implicated in tendon healing and post-operative clinical results. Some are unchangeable (age, tear size, chronicity...) but some are under the surgeon control like the surgical technique and the post-operative rehabilitation protocol. It exists many surgical repair techniques6, 7, with a massive development of technology during the last twenty years. However in terms of rehabilitation, there is only few studies and evidence of best practices4. The main aspect on which the surgeon can act, is the immobilization time. Actually, standard protocols include an immobilisation of 4 to 6 weeks before physiotherapy beginning5.

A recent review of the literature3 has highlighted five studies comparing different rehabilitation protocols, which include different immobilization periods ranging from 0 to 8 weeks, and different types of mobilization (under physiotherapist supervision or not, with machine or not). They found a similar rate of re-tear between the different protocols. But early passive motion enables to improve the range of motion during first 3-6 months, with similar results at one year.

However in all these studies, all patients had to wear a sling for at least 4 weeks, even in the early mobilization group. But the investigators don't know if this sling is really useful, probably not if the investigators follow the logic of faster recovery and same long term results with early mobilization. At our best knowledge, no study has sought to compare the usefulness of sling wearing after a rotator cuff repair. Removing sling could simplify rehabilitation and should provide a return to normal function faster, with greater satisfaction and a similar rate of re-tear.

The aim of this study is to compare rehabilitation with the wearing of a sling, to rehabilitation without any immobilization after an arthroscopic repair of the supraspinatus tendon.

Enrollment

80 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients over 18 years old
  • Small tear (< 3cm) of the supraspinatus tendon
  • Arthroscopic cuff repair

Exclusion criteria

  • Lesion of the anterior or posterior rotator cuff
  • Significant other trauma of the involved upper member (e.g. associated scapular or clavicular fractures, acromioclavicular dislocation)
  • Preoperative shoulder stiffness
  • Inability to follow properly post-surgery recommendations.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

80 participants in 2 patient groups

Rotator cuff repair with sling
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients wear a sling during 4 weeks, they also move passively during this period. Then progressive active mobilization is done.
Treatment:
Procedure: Rotator cuff repair
Rotator cuff repair without sling
Experimental group
Description:
Patients don't wear any sling, they move passively in all axes during 4 weeks. Then progressive active mobilization is done.
Treatment:
Procedure: Rotator cuff repair

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Adrien Switzguebel, MD; Alexandre Lädermann, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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