Friday, September 19, 2025

In comparison to anatomic total shoulder, reverse total shoulder is associated with greater anterior shoulder pain and internal rotation dysfunction in patients with osteoarthritis.

While there is a trend toward increasing use of reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (rTSA) instead of the traditional anatomic total shoulder (aTSA) in the surgical management of glenohumeral arthritis with an intact rotator cuff, the patient outcomes of rTSA can be complicated by anterior shoulder pain (Conjoint tendon release for persistent anterior shoulder pain following reverse total shoulder arthroplasty) and deficits in internal rotator function (Internal rotation limitation is prevalent following modern reverse shoulder arthroplasty and negatively affects patients' subjective rating of the procedure). 

The authors of Comparison of anterior shoulder pain and internal rotation dysfunction after anatomic and reverse shoulder arthroplasty for osteoarthritis assessed these two complications at two years in similar patients with arthritis having rTSA or aTSA using an anterior shoulder pain and dysfunction score (ASPDS) and the functional internal rotation (FIR) score [these two questionnaires are shown at the end of this post].

Twenty-six patients were included in each of the aTSA and rTSA groups. Mean ASPDS scores were lower in the rTSA group (p=.001). 


Mean FIR score was also worse in the rTSA group compared with the aTSA group (p = .004). 

The ASES, SANE, and VAS scores were not signficantly different between the two groups (I believe this is because only 2 out of 100 points of the ASES score are given for internal rotation; the SANE and VAS scores are each a single number without any functional specificity). The Simple Shoulder Test was not used in this study (High and low performers in internal rotation after reverse total shoulder arthroplasty: A biplane fluoroscopic study found that the SST was sensitive to loss of internal rotation function).

In their discussion, the authors state, "In our experience, patients who undergo rTSA more commonly identify anterior shoulder pain and discomfort with tasks requiring forward elevation. rTSA patients scored an average of 3.5 points lower on the ASPDS compared to aTSA. Specifically, these patients reported worse outcomes on the questions about having anterior shoulder pain with activity, reaching out to shake someone’s hand or grab a TV remote, raising their arm to touch their face and hair, lifting a grocery bag to the counter, and pushing open a heavy door." These are substantial disabilities.

Comment: This is an important study in that it showed that patients having reverse total shoulder arthroplasty for arthritis had significantly greater problems with anterior shoulder pain and internal rotation dysfunction than those having anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty.

The authors of another recent study, Extension of the Shoulder is Essential for Functional Internal Rotation After Reverse Total Shoulder Arthroplasty proposed that limitation of reach behind the body after RTSA may not be primarily related to a deficit of glenohumeral internal rotation but rather due to a lack of humerothoracic extension.


From the above I suspect that anterior shoulder pain and loss of functional internal rotation are both due to over-tightening of the coracoid muscles by excessive distalization of the humeral component in reverse total shoulder arthroplasty. Surgeons can examine humerothoracic extension with the trial rTSA components in place. If extension is limited, the surgeon can consider modifying the amount of distalization or release of the short head of the biceps and coracobrachialis from the coracoid.

Keeping in mind that the tension in the coracoid muscles is always increased by reverse total shoulder arthroplasty, surgeons can measure the amount of distalization (and lateralization) on preoperative and postoperative radiographs and use these measurements as part of the evalation of patients who have postoperative anterior shoulder pain and internal rotation functional deficits. In the example below the humerus has been distalized relative to the acromion by 24 mm, from 15.1 mm before surgery to 39.1 mm after surgery.


These potential adverse outcomes merit consideration of the choice of type of arthroplasty (rTSA vs aTSA) for patients with cuff-intact osteoarthritis.

The potential complications of reverse total shoulder are worth a good look


Western Tanager
Matsen backyard
2020

You can support cutting edge shoulder research that is leading to better care for patients with shoulder problems, click on this link

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Follow on facebook: https://www.facebook.com/shoulder.arthritis
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Here are some videos that are of shoulder interest
Shoulder arthritis - what you need to know (see this link).
How to x-ray the shoulder (see this link).
The ream and run procedure (see this link).
The total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The cuff tear arthropathy arthroplasty (see this link).
The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The smooth and move procedure for irreparable rotator cuff tears (see this link)
Shoulder rehabilitation exercises (see this link).


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Internal rotation scores






Thursday, September 18, 2025

Is Anatomic Glenoid Component Retroversion Associated with Clinical Outcomes?


Shoulder surgeons often strive to insert the glenoid comonent of an anatomic total shoulder arthroplasty in less than 15 degrees of retroversion. If there is more than 15 degrees of version on preoperative imaging they may attempt version "correction" by reaming of the anterior glenoid bone, posterior bone grafting or using posteriorly augmented glenoiod components. Of course, each of these approaches has its potential downsides: removal of quality bone, failure of graft incorporation, and difficulty seating+increased loosening moment arm, respectively.




Above figure from Eccentric reaming is superior to augmented components in B2 glenoids: a biomechanical study Agumented component on the left and standard component on conservatively reamed glenoid on the right.

CT based preoperative planning is commonly used prior to anatomic arthroplasty to evaluate glenoid version and plan its management. Because of the Projected Lifetime Cancer Risks From Current Computed Tomography Imaging and Computed Tomography for Preoperative Shoulder Arthroplasty Planning: Lifetime Malignancy Risk,  it is worth asking whether CT scans are necessary for arthroplasty planning in routine cases (see CT-free arthroplasty planning).

All of the above beg the question "is retroversion of the glenoid component associated with the outcome the patient realizes after anatomic arthroplasty?"

A 2024 article, Does glenoid version and its correction affect outcomes in anatomic shoulder arthroplasty? A systematic review,  reviewed 16 studies, including 1211 shoulders and concluded "There is currently insufficient evidence that pre- or postoperative glenoid version influences postoperative outcomes independent of other morphologic factors such as joint line medialization. Given that noncorrective reaming demonstrated favorable postoperative outcomes, and that postoperative glenoid version was not significantly and consistently found to impact outcomes, there is inconclusive evidence that correcting glenoid retroversion is routinely required."

A recent article by different authors, Does Postoperative Glenoid Component Retroversion Following Anatomic Total Shoulder Arthroplasty Affect Clinical Outcomes? A Systematic Review and Meta- Analysis. reviewed 15 English language articles reporting 2-year clinical outcomes and postoperative glenoid version (1190 shoulders). 73% were published in the last 5 years. 

346 patients had glenoid component retroversion ≥ 15 degrees (mean 20±4 degrees)

833 patients had glenoid component retroversion < 15 degrees (mean 7.7±4 degrees).

The authors did not find signficant differences between patients with <15 and ≥ 15 degrees of glenoid component retroversion for patient reported outcomes, range of motion, complications or revisions.

When evaluating radiolucencies for shoulders with <15 vs ≥15 degrees of postoperative glenoid component version, shoulders with ≥15 degrees of glenoid component retroversion had less radiolucency: a statistically significantly higher rate of no radiolucency (Lazarus 0 score) (p<0.001). There was no statistically significant difference in the likelihood of a CPG 3 (bone growth within the central-peg flanges) for shoulders with <15 vs ≥15 degrees of postoperative glenoid component version.

Comment: While there may be theoretical arguments for insertion of anatomic glenoid components in <15 degrees of retroversion,  the pubished literature does not provide evidence that glenoid component version is associated with the outcome realized by the patient. 

It may be that secure glenoid component seating, rather than "correction of glenoid version" is the priority. 




  1. Secure seating

Wilson's Snipe
Malheur
May 2025

  1. Follow on twitter/X: https://x.com/RickMatsen
    Follow on facebook: https://www.facebook.com/shoulder.arthritis
    Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rick-matsen-88b1a8133/

    Here are some videos that are of shoulder interest
    Shoulder arthritis - what you need to know (see this link).
    How to x-ray the shoulder (see this link).
    The ream and run procedure (see this link).
    The total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
    The cuff tear arthropathy arthroplasty (see this link).
    The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
    The smooth and move procedure for irreparable rotator cuff tears (see this link)
    Shoulder rehabilitation exercises (see this link).

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

For want of a nail, the kingdom was lost: a causal model


In the last several posts we'ved talked about an approach to failure analysis through causal modeling.

On a somewhat more lighthearted note, here's an old proverb with a causal model:

*the shoe was lost for want of a nail (A horseshoe nail is missing when a horse is being shod.)


*the horse was lost for want of a shoe (the shoe falls off during riding)



*the rider was lost for want of a horse (without the shoe, the horse stumbles)


*the battle was lost for want of the rider (the rider cannot continue, so his part in the battle fails)


*the kingdom was lost for want of a battle (losing the battle means the kingdom is lost—all because of one missing nail)

Counterfactual: if there had been a nail to fix the shoe, the kingdom would not have been lost.


Here's an analogous causal model of glenoid component failure:


*the quality of glenoid component seating was lost for want of good bone preparation

*secure bony support of the component was lost for want of good component seating

*glenoid component stability was lost for want of secure bony support of the component 

*patient comfort and function were lost for want of glenoid component stability

*survivorship of the glenoid component was lost for want of patient comfort and function


Counterfactual: if there had been better bone preparation, the glenoid component would have survived



Follow on twitter/X: https://x.com/RickMatsen
Follow on facebook: https://www.facebook.com/shoulder.arthritis
Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rick-matsen-88b1a8133/

Here are some videos that are of shoulder interest
Shoulder arthritis - what you need to know (see this link).
How to x-ray the shoulder (see this link).
The ream and run procedure (see this link).
The total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The cuff tear arthropathy arthroplasty (see this link).
The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The smooth and move procedure for irreparable rotator cuff tears (see this link)
Shoulder rehabilitation exercises (see this link).

Sunday, September 14, 2025

Updated: As many as 25,000 acromial / scapular spine fractures may occur per year after reverse total shoulders. What are we doing about it??


Two recent articles Acromial stress fractures and reactions after reverse total shoulder arthroplasty: a case-control study and Risk Factors for Acromial and Scapular Fractures Following Reverse Shoulder Arthroplasty: A Meta-analysis of Over 100,000 Shoulders  confirm that these fractures are among the most common, most serious and most difficult to treat complications of reverse total shoulder arthroplasty. We see that the rate of acromial / spine fractures is not decreasing and that with the increasing use of reverse total shoulder arthroplasty the number of patients experiencing these fractures each year will continue to rise rapidly, perhaps to as many as 25,000 per year globally.



and 7,000 per year in the US.


Although the factors associated with these fractures are well known: osteoporosis, inflammatory arthritis, female sex, older age and lower BMI, corticosteroid use, rotator cuff deficiency, prior shoulder surgery (especially cuff repair), none of these is modifiable by the surgeon.

While some surgeon-controlled risk factors have been identified (screw placement and coracoacromial ligament preservation), other possible factors (humeral and glenoid component distalization and lateralization, acromio-tuberosity contact in abduction, change in acromio-humeral distance, and the timelineness and vigor of post operative rehabilitation) have not been consistently associated with fracture risk.

In that most rTSAs have successful outcomes, by what means can we learn how to reduce the rising number of acromial-spine fractures?

The Shoulder Arthroplasty Failture Research initiative seeks to learn safety lessons - not by statistical analysis of large case series or registry data  - but rather by considering in each individual fracture case what might have been done differently to avoid the patient experiencing the complication = causal modeling.

NASA has had 178 crewed space flights and two fatal flights. The two failures taught valuable safety lessons that could not have been learned from statistical analysis of the 178 "cases".  
In each of two individual fatal accidents, NASA had to model many possible causes of the tragedy. The results of causal modeling are shown below.


Challenger (STS-51L, 1986) Cause: Failure of an O-ring seal in the right solid rocket booster. All seven astronauts died. Cold weather on launch day made the rubber O-rings brittle. Engineers had raised concerns about launching in freezing weather, but management overrode them under schedule pressureRichard Feynman placed a piece of the O-ring material into a glass of ice water and showed that the rubber lost its elasticity at low temperatures, failing to spring back quickly. Counterfactual: had a cold-tested O-ring been used, the lives of the seven astronauts may have been spared.



Columbia (STS-107, 2003) Cause: A piece of foam insulation from the external tank broke off during launch, striking the left wing's leading edge, damaging its reinforced carbon-carbon panels. The crew module was destroyed on re-entry. All seven astronauts died. NASA had a history of foam shedding from the external tank before Columbia, but it was consistently downplayedCounterfactual: had NASA addressed the prior foam insulation failures, the lives of the seven astronauts may have been spared.





Consider these two cases of acromial/spine fractures after reverse total shoulder arthroplasty


In the case on the right, most of us would suggest the counterfactual that "if the screw had not been placed in the scapular spine, the fracture would likely have been avoided".

However, in the case on the left, is it likely that the fracture would have been avoided if the surgeon had achieved a lower position of the baseplate, more inferior tilt of the baseplate, more or less humeral distalization, more or less humeral lateralization, by assuring lack of tuberosity-acromion contact, or...? Expert surgeons may have different opinions, but we will only learn by pushing ourselves to answer the causation question, "would the outcome have been different if..?"

So.... 

A. for each acromion/spine fracture case, we should consider

(1) a pre-defined set of causal variables that could have been changed by the surgeon

Screw position: trajectories, lengths, whether any screw is outside-in; distance from superior screw tip to scapular spine; posterior screw proximity to suprascapular notch

Scapular ring status: coracoacromial ligament  (CAL) intact vs transected; any deltotrapezial fascia compromise. 

Construct geometry: humeral distalization, humeral lateralization, neck-shaft angle, humeral inlay/onlay, glenosphere lateralization, glenoid  baseplate tilt, inferior  glenosphereoverhang.  Pre to post op change in acromiohumeral distance (ΔAHD)

Rehab intensity & timing: early deltoid loading milestones.

(2) factors that were non-modifiable for that operation, but critical for counterfactual simulation

Patient bone health: DEXA/T-score proxy; steroid use; rheumatoid/inflammatory arthritis. 

Rotator cuff status: Tear, cuff tear arthropathy

B. Pose explicit counterfactuals
Example queries for each fracture case, for example in a specific case ask: 

  • “If the superior screw had been omitted or shortened (inferior-only fixation), would fracture probability have dropped?” 

  • “If the CAL had been preserved, would modeled spine strain have stayed below fatigue thresholds?” 

  • “If humeral distalization (ΔAHD) had been 3–4 mm less, would the risk have decreased?” 

Pair each patient with 2–4 closest non-fracture rTSA controls (same age/sex/diagnosis/cuff status, bone quality) and run a small within-case causal analysis (not just regression): what single change (if any) most reduces predicted risk for this patient?

C. Convert findings into micro-rules (“guardrails”).
Examples that fall straight out of current evidence:

  • Avoid outside-in or long superior screws when fixation allows; favor inferior-biased screw strategy. 

  • Preserve the CAL unless there’s a compelling reason to release it. 

  • Limit humeral distalization; scrutinize ΔAHD and inferior overhang. 

  • Create a “spine-at-risk” checklist for osteoporotic, inflammatory arthritis, steroid-using, cuff-deficient, very low-BMI patients—flagging surgeon controlled variables that appear most influential on fracture risk in this group of patients..

D. As the library of cases grows: every 10–20 fracture cases, publish short, anonymized notes summarizing the modifiable factors that appearn to have the greatest preventable impact on fracture risk? 


About our two example cases

  • Right-hand image (with a screw traversing the spine): the counterfactual (“no superior screw / shorter screw / inferior-only fixation”) is very plausible given where many fractures localize. 

  • Left-hand image (debate over baseplate height/tilt, lateralization, distalization, tuberosity–acromion contact): literature does not consistently link most of these to fractures, with the notable exception of excess distalization. Capture ΔAHD, CAL status, and screw map; then test those counterfactuals first.

This type of causal modeling is not familiar to most surgeon-scientists, but we should begin learning to put it to use for the good of our future patients.

Our colleague Jon Levy responded to this post:

"Another outstanding post.
Over the past 15 years I have integrated all of these factors into my workflow and planning efforts.
Of the modifiable actions, I strongly believe the greatest reduction in acromion fractures occurred with:
1) inlay humerus — since I philosophically believe in glenoid-based laterization to maximize motion and avoid notching induced osteolysis, implanting the humerus within the metaphysis (rather than above it) had a dramatic reduction in fracture rate
2) preop planning — focus on 3 goals — (a) maximize glenoid fixation; (b) achieve at least 70 degrees of abduction motion before greater to acromion impingement; (c) avoid final position of the humerus being more lateral than preop position.
Preop planning had the greatest impact in year to year variation in my fracture rate."

I asked Jon how he managed the rTSA when the planned reconstruction was too loose. His response was "If after reducing the shoulder, the tension is not right and soft tissue balancing is too loose, I typically will select a +4 semi constrained trial. 

 

With the system I use, constraint is added by going deeper into the poly socket. This essentially equates to a +2.5 but gains additional constraint.

 

I almost never go to a +8"  



Looking for answers





Cooper's Hawk
Matsen Backyard
2021


Follow on twitter/X: https://x.com/RickMatsen
Follow on facebook: https://www.facebook.com/shoulder.arthritis
Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rick-matsen-88b1a8133/

Here are some videos that are of shoulder interest
Shoulder arthritis - what you need to know (see this link).
How to x-ray the shoulder (see this link).
The ream and run procedure (see this link).
The total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The cuff tear arthropathy arthroplasty (see this link).
The reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (see this link).
The smooth and move procedure for irreparable rotator cuff tears (see this link)
Shoulder rehabilitation exercises (see this link).