RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: This study examines the usefulness of MR imaging for assessing patients who have undergone shoulder surgery and have persistent postoperative complaints. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Fifty patients with persistent postoperative shoulder pain underwent MR imaging before second-look arthroscopy. The MR imaging findings were correlated with findings at surgery. RESULTS: With surgical findings as the gold standard, we found MR imaging to be 100% sensitive and 87% specific in revealing full- or partial-thickness supraspinatus tendon tears. MR imaging was 84% sensitive and 87% specific in revealing residual impingement. The positive predictive value of MR imaging for diagnosing partial-thickness tears of the supraspinatus tendon was 56%. With this exception, the MR imaging findings correlated well with findings at arthroscopic second-look surgery. CONCLUSION: In patients who have undergone shoulder surgery, MR imaging is useful in pinpointing disorders and in planning for second-look surgery in patients with persistent postoperative complaints.
Assuntos
Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Complicações Pós-Operatórias/diagnóstico , Síndrome de Colisão do Ombro/cirurgia , Adulto , Idoso , Artroscopia , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Músculo Esquelético/patologia , Dor/etiologia , Recidiva , Reoperação , Manguito Rotador/patologia , Manguito Rotador/cirurgia , Sensibilidade e Especificidade , Síndrome de Colisão do Ombro/patologia , Articulação do Ombro/patologia , Tendões/patologiaRESUMO
We used magnetic resonance imaging to evaluate thirty shoulders in twenty-nine patients who had unacceptable pain and loss of function after at least one operative procedure for a lesion of the rotator cuff. A preoperative history was recorded and physical and radiographic examinations were performed before magnetic resonance imaging. All patients had a reoperation two to 156 months (average, thirty-two months) after the operation. The results of the magnetic resonance imaging and the findings at the most recent operation were then compared with regard to the integrity of the rotator cuff, the deltoid muscle, and the long head of the biceps tendon. The sensitivity and specificity of magnetic resonance imaging for the diagnosis of full-thickness tears, partial-thickness tears, and intact rotator cuffs were 84 and 91 per cent, 83 and 83 per cent, and 80 and 100 per cent, respectively. The positive and negative predictive values were 94 and 77 per cent, 56 and 95 per cent, and 100 and 96 per cent, respectively. Three shoulders had a clinically detached and retracted origin of the deltoid muscle that was identified correctly on magnetic resonance imaging, and this finding was confirmed operatively. A rupture of the long head of the biceps tendon was identified correctly in four of six shoulders. In one of the two remaining shoulders, the rupture was obscured on magnetic resonance imaging because of a so-called balloon artefact from a nearby metal suture anchor. Magnetic resonance imaging detected two unexpected lesions: a denudation of the articular cartilage in one shoulder and a ganglion cyst in the supraspinatus muscle in another.