Showing posts with label arthroplasty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arthroplasty. Show all posts

Friday, July 12, 2024

Shoulder motion, function and satisfaction after arthroplasty


A recent article, Thresholds For Diminishing Returns In Postoperative Range Of Motion After Total Shoulder Arthroplasty, pointed out that satisfaction after shoulder arthroplasty - can be associated with scores on patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). (See Patient satisfaction after shoulder arthroplasty - anticipation and informing). In turn, PROMs are dependent upon restoring lost shoulder range of motion (ROM). The authors questioned whether there was a threshold in postoperative active ROM beyond which additional improvement in motion was not associated with additional improvement in the PROMs that primarily measured function (Simple Shoulder Test [SST], American Shoulder and Elbow Surgeons [ASES] score, and the Shoulder Pain and Disability Index [SPADI]). (
Of note, other outcome measures, such as the Shoulder Arthroplasty Smart Score, primarily measure motion (70% of the total score) attributing only 10% of the points to function).

They included 4,459 TSAs (1,802 aTSAs, 2,657 rTSAs) with minimum 2-year follow-up. Indeed they found thresholds in postoperative ROM that were associated with no further improvement in the standard PROMs.

The "S" shapes of these curves are interesting. See for example the figures below plotting the patient's Simple Shoulder Test (SST) responses against active flexion and active external rotation. 




At the left side of these curves, improvement in motion has little effect on the number of SST functions the shoulder could perform. In the middle, there is a steep improvement in function with increasing range. At the right hand of the "S", the curve flattens out so that further improvements in range are not strongly associated with increased function. For the SST the inflection points (thresholds) were 153 degrees for active flexion, 50 degrees of active external rotation, and active internal rotation to L2. Similar thresholds were found for other function-based outcome measures, including the ASES score and the SPADI.

Subjective satisfaction was assessed by asking patients to rate their shoulder as being  “worse”, “unchanged”, “better”, or “much better” compared to before surgery. Among shoulders that achieved all ROM thresholds, 93% of patients rated their shoulder as “much better” compared to before surgery.

It is interesting to view these results in the light of data presented in Practical Evaluation and Management of the Shoulder. The authors of that book characterized elevation in terms of the angle of elevation


and the plane of elevation.




They learned that - rather than being confined to "abduction" and "flexion" - different functions were performed in different planes and with different angles of elevation.


It can be seen that the average maximum angle of elevation for eight normal subjects was 148 degrees, and that this range was not necessary for most of the activities of daily living.

Of course the ability to perform functions does not only depend on elevation angle and plane, but also on the rotation of the arm as shown below.


Thresholds For Diminishing Returns In Postoperative Range Of Motion After Total Shoulder Arthroplasty is an important article in that it can help guide motion goals for arthroplasty surgery and postoperative rehabilitation. It suggests that a shoulder that has active elevation to 180, external rotation to 90 and internal rotation to T7 may not be more functional or satisfactory than one has 153 degrees of active flexion, 50 degrees of active external rotation, and active internal rotation to L2. 


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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). 








Thursday, April 2, 2020

Does computer assisted surgery improve arthroplasty outcomes?

Outcomes of Computer-Assisted Surgery Compared with Conventional Instrumentation in 19,221 Total Knee Arthroplasties Results After a Mean of 4.5 Years of Follow-Up

These authors compared the revision rates and functional outcomes following total knee arthroplasty performed with either computer assisted surgery (CAS) or conventional instrumentation.

The data were analyzed by comparing 2 cohorts of patients: those managed by high-volume surgeons who routinely used CAS (“routine CAS” surgeons) and those managed by high-volume surgeons who routinely used conventional instrumentation (“routine conventional” surgeons).

The mean duration of follow-up was 4.5 years (range, 0 to 12 years).

The revision rate per 100 component-years was 0.437 for the “routine CAS” surgeons, compared with 0.440 for the “routine conventional” surgeons (p = 0.724).



For patients <65 years of age, the revision rate per 100 component years was equivalent for the “routine CAS” and “routine conventional” surgeons (0.585 compared with 0.508; p = 0.524).

The OKS scores were similar at 6 months (38.88 compared with 38.52; p = 0.172), 5 years (42.26 compared with 41.77; p = 0.206), and 10 years (41.59 compared with 41.74; p = 0.893) when comparing the 2 cohorts.



Surgeons who had performed >50 TKAs with use of CAS took 10 minutes longer on average than those who used conventional instrumentation (92 compared with 82 minutes; p = 0.012). 

Comment: The cost of CAS includes that of preoperative imaging, special instrumentation and increased operating time. At a time when health care resources are precious, one must ask whether these incremental costs are justified by better outcomes than those achieved with standard instrumentation.

We have a new set of shoulder youtubes about the shoulder, check them out at this link.

Be sure to visit "Ream and Run - the state of the art" regarding this radically conservative approach to shoulder arthritis at this link and this link

Use the "Search" box to the right to find other topics of interest to you.


You may be interested in some of our most visited web pages arthritis, total shoulder, ream and run, reverse total shoulder, CTA arthroplasty, and rotator cuff surgery as well as the 'ream and run essentials'


Monday, June 13, 2016

Which patients continue to use narcotics after joint replacement?


Trends and predictors of opioid use after total knee and total hip arthroplasty.


These authors asked 574 patients to complete validated, self-report measures of pain, functioning, and mood before and longitudinally for 6 months after total knee (TKA) and total hip (THA) arthroplasty.

Only 8.2% of TKS and 4.3% of THA patients not taking narcotics immediately prior to surgery (opioid-naive) were still using opioids at 6 months. 

In comparison, 53.3% of TKA and 34.7% of THA patients who reported opioid use the day of surgery continued to use opioids at 6 months. 

Patients taking >60 mg oral morphine equivalents preoperatively had an 80% likelihood of persistent use postoperatively. Below is a conversion chart for the different narcotics from this source.




Day of surgery predictors for 6-month opioid use by opioid-naive patients included greater overall body pain (P = 0.002), greater affected joint pain (knee/hip) (P = 0.034), and greater catastrophizing (P = 0.010). 

For both opioid-naive and opioid users on the day of surgery, decreases in overall body pain from baseline to 6 months were associated with decreased odds of being on opioids at 6 months (adjusted odds ratio; however, change in affected joint pain (knee/hip) was not predictive of opioid use.

Among patients who were opioid naive the day of surgery, opioid use at 3 months was associated with a 56 (TKA) and 12 (THA) times greater risk of persistent opioids use at 6 months. These data support developing better monitoring of opioid use before 3 months to consider points of possible intervention.
The authors concluded that many patients taking opioids before surgery continue to use opioids after arthroplasty and some opioid-naive patients remained on opioids; however, persistent opioid use was not associated with change in joint pain.

They hypothesize that the reasons patients continue to use opioids may be due to (1) pain in other areas, (2) self-medicating for affective distress, and (3) therapeutic opioid dependence.

Comment: Management if narcotic medication after joint replacement can be one of the most difficult aspects of the post-athroplasty period, often challenging the harmony of the surgeon-patient relationship. It is helpful to counsel patients using narcotics before surgery that their recovery may be complicated as a result - special arrangements for postoperative pain management should be in place before surgery. Patients still using narcotics at 3 months have a greatly increased likelihood of using them at 6 months.

And then there is this from the CDC (link).






Seth Leopold, editor of CORR, offers this comment "Why not work with these patients in advance of elective surgery to help wean them off these drugs? It is nearly always possible, particularly if one helps patients who need it get help for depression, which often overlaps. But it takes effort and patience, and one cannot be in too much of a hurry to operate. It's worth the wait!"

Point well taken!

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Monday, May 16, 2016

What is a 'good' result after a joint replacement arthroplasty and how it can it be predicted?

Age and Preoperative Knee Society Score Are Significant Predictors of Outcomes Among Asians Following Total Knee Arthroplasty.

While this paper is about knees, its substance is relevant to important questions about shoulder arthroplasty: what is a good result and how can it be predicted?

These authors extracted registry data from 2006 to 2010. Outcomes were evaluated using the Oxford Knee Score (OKS)(higher scores indicate greater disability) and the Short Form (SF)-36 physical component summary (PCS)(higher scores indicate better physical function). Follow-up data were available for 3,062 patients who underwent primary TKA (mean age of 66.4 years; 79.5% female).

A "good outcome" at 5 years was defined in two ways:
(1) as an improvement in scores of greater than or equal to the minimal clinically important difference (MCID) in the primary analysis. The MCID for the OKS was 5, and the MCID for the PCS was 10. 
(2) as an OKS of <30 and a PCS score of >50. 

Age and preoperative Knee Society score (KSS) were found to be significant predictors. 

When outcomes were assessed by the MCID, lesser age and lower (worse) preoperative KSS predicted a good outcome at 5 years. 



When outcomes were assessed by absolute criteria (postoperative scores measured against OKS and PCS thresholds), a higher (better) preoperative KSS predicted a good outcome at 5 years. The effect of age was not significant.



Body mass index, preoperative flexion range, SF-36 mental component summary (MCS) score, mechanical alignment, sex, education level, ethnicity, operative side, number of comorbidities, type of anesthesia, and type of implant were found not to be significant predictors.

The authors concluded that the majority (85%) of their patients with osteoarthritis had good outcomes according to the MCID criterion and benefitted from primary TKA.

Older patients with a lower (worse) preoperative KSS can be informed that they have a high likelihood of improvement but a lower likelihood of achieving as good a functional outcome as those with better scores.

Comment: This paper is informative.
First, many of the factors that one might think would infuence the quality of the result did not have a significant effect (BMI, preoperative flexion range, SF-36 mental component summary (MCS) score, mechanical alignment, sex, education level, ethnicity, operative side, number of comorbidities, type of anesthesia, and type of implant).

Second, they showed that patients who were more functional before surgery realized the best function after surgery, whereas those who were less functional before surgery realized the most improvement.

These outcomes can be emulated by the chart below that uses data for three hypothetical patients.


We will all agree that the patient represented by the circle did poorly (as would be the case for any patient below the line). But did the diamond patient or the square patient get the better result? The diamond patient improved more but the square patient wound up with 90% of normal function and improved by half of the preoperative functional deficit (whereas the diamond improved only 33% of the preoperative functional deficit).

Rather than arguing whether the amount of improvement or the absolute value of the postoperative function is better, we should acknowlege that both may be useful in explaining the likely result of surgery to the patient.

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You may be interested in some of our most visited web pages including:shoulder arthritis, total shoulder, ream and runreverse total shoulderCTA arthroplasty, and rotator cuff surgery as well as the 'ream and run essentials'


Monday, December 15, 2014

Considerations in treating shoulder arthritis in patients under 50 years of age


Shoulder arthroplasty options in young (<50 years old) patients: review of current concepts

Glenohumeral arthritis in young individuals seems to be increasingly diagnosed and offered surgical treatment. As we've posted before these young individuals have different types of arthritis than their older counterparts - many are associated with failed prior surgeries, including chondrolysis, anchor problems in labral repairs, infection, and capsulorrhaphy arthropathy. Other causes of arthritis in young folks include avascular necrosis, inflammatory arthropathy, and glenoid dysplasia. Finally, young individuals may present with earlier stages of arthritis because of their inability to perform at their desired level. Thus there are at least three reasons why the management of arthritis in younger individuals is more demanding: (1) higher patient expectations, (2) increased longevity, (3) more complex pathology and (4) earlier presentation.

This is a review of many of the surgical options for the management of shoulder arthritis in the young person. It is apparent that thoughtful discussion of these options is warranted with each young patient considering shoulder arthroplasty. Longer term followup of these patients stratified by diagnosis will be of great interest.

The authors make a point about the ream and run procedure, "Whereas the described technique does not ream completely through subchondral bone, there is some concern that excessive reaming into the subchondral bone will lead to progressive glenoid erosion and medialization of the glenohumeral joint. It is unclear how this will affect long-term outcome, but it might make subsequent placement
of a glenoid prosthesis difficult if not impossible."  

In this regard it is important to emphasize (as shown in the figure below), our technique for the ream and run procedure removes only enough bone to achieve a single glenoid concavity, it removes less bone than what is necessary to insert a standard polyethylene glenoid component,  a stepped polyethylene glenoid component, or a metal-backed glenoid component. 
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Thursday, November 27, 2014

Antibiotic prophylaxis in joint arthroplasty - is Vancomycin a worthwhile addition or not?


Addition of Vancomycin to Cefazolin Prophylaxis Is Associated With Acute Kidney Injury After Primary Joint Arthroplasty

These authors performed a retrospective study of 1828 patients undergoing primary hip and knee arthroplasty over a 2-year period who received either cefazolin (n = 500) or cefazolin and vancomycin (n = 1328) as perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis looking for evidence of acute kidney injury after surgery.

They found that patients receiving dual antibiotics were more likely to develop kidney injury compared with those receiving cefazolin alone (13% versus 8%, p = 0.002) and that patients receiving dual-antibiotic prophylaxis had higher rates of Grade II and III acute kidney injury.
However, there was no difference in the rate of return to baseline renal function.

Preoperative kidney disease and higher ASA classification were independent risk factors for AKI after primary total joint arthroplasty.

Comment: Because of our concern for coagulase negative staphylococcus (mecA positive) in shoulder arthroplasty, we use Vancomycin and Ceftriaxone as our routine prophylaxis for 24 h after surgery. We have not demonstrated the efficacy of this program over other forms of antibiotic prophylaxis, however. We are careful to assure adequate hydration, to adjust the dose in individuals with compromised renal function, and to administer the Vancomycin slowly to minimize the risk of renal toxicity.

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Use the "Search" box to the right to find other topics of interest to you.

You may be interested in some of our most visited web pages including:shoulder arthritis, total shoulder, ream and runreverse total shoulderCTA arthroplasty, and rotator cuff surgery as well as the 'ream and run essentials'

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Patients on Medicaid are at greater risk for complications after arthroplasty

Medicaid Payer Status Is Associated with In-Hospital Morbidity and Resource Utilization Following Primary Total Joint Arthroplasty

The Affordable Care Act has extended health care coverage through an expansion of the Medicaid program. In order to compare outcomes of Medicaid and non-Medicaid insurees, these authors used the Nationwide Inpatient Sample database to identify patients who had undergone primary hip or knee arthroplasty from 2002 through 2011.

They found 191,911 patients who underwent total joint arthroplasty with Medicaid payer status (2.8% of the entire total joint arthroplasty population). 107,335 (56%) of these Medicaid patients were matched one to one to a non-Medicaid patient according to age, sex, race, type of total joint arthroplasty, procedure year, hospital characteristics, smoking status, and twenty-nine comorbidities.

Medicaid patients had a higher prevalence of postoperative in-hospital infection, wound dehiscence, and hematoma or seroma, but a lower risk of cardiac complications. The length of the hospital stay was longer, total cost was higher, and discharge to an inpatient facility was more frequent for patients with Medicaid status.

Comment: This study indicates that even with careful matching, Medicaid insurance status is a risk factor for complications and increase cost of care. The first implication is that such individuals deserve extraordinary preoperative medical and social evaluation as well as in depth counseling to minimize the risk and prepare for the possibilities of complications. The second implication is that medical centers and providers caring for these patients should anticipate a higher level of work and less reimbursement in caring for these individuals. The third implication is that providers and medical centers caring for a individuals on Medicaid may carry the risk that scores on quality of performance scales may be lower that with individuals on other types of health coverage. If these disincentives for providing care to Medicaid patients are to be removed, government systems need to revise the payment and readmission penalty systems currently in place. These observations are especially relevant to the bundled payment initiative. For more on bundled payments, see also here.
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Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Risk of readmission is associated with more comorbidity

Higher Charlson Comorbidity Index Scores are Associated With Readmission After Orthopaedic Surgery.

These authors sought to determine if Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) was correlated with the risk of  hospital readmission,  surgical site infection or other adverse events,  transfusion, or  mortality after orthopaedic surgery.

Of a total of 30,129 patients having orthopaedic surgeries performed between 2008 and 2011,
913 patients (3.0%) were readmitted within 30 days after discharge;
393 (1.4%) had adverse events occurred; 
417 (1.4%) had a surgical site infection develop; 
211 (0.7%) needed transfusions, and 
56 (0.2%) died within 30 days after surgery. 

Every point increase in CCI score added an additional 0.45% risk in readmission for patients undergoing arthroplasty. While it was  not associated with surgical site infection or other adverse surgical events, it was associated with the risk of transfusion and mortality. 

Comment: The patient's overall health is one of the major determinants of the outcome of surgery. As interest grows in bundled payment for elective surgery (that includes the risk of 90 day readmission), profiling of the risk of readmission will become increasingly important. We have posted previously on the importance of comorbidity

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Thursday, January 23, 2014

Proximal humeral malunion - treatment with arthroplasty


Anatomic shoulder arthroplasty for treatment of proximal humerus malunions

Post-traumatic arthritis often presents a major challenge at shoulder arthroplasty.

These authors report the results they obtained in humeral malunion cases using  hemiarthroplasty in 45 and total shoulder arthroplasty in 50 patients. 

These procedures were often complex and on occasion required unusual positioning of the prosthesis and osteotomy and repositioning of the tuberosities in 37 cases. Rotator cuff repair was performed in 16. Other steps included removal of fixation in 18, acromioplasty in 11, biceps tenodesis in 6, trimming of greater tuberosity in 5, glenoidplasty in 4, humeral diaphyseal osteotomy in 1, posterior capsule plication in 1, and lengthening of pectoralis major in 1.

Overall, range of motion and comfort were improved. 31 shoulders had followup x-rays. Tuberosity osteotomies were healed in 20 cases.  Sixteen complications required 10 reoperations, including 6 of 9 patients with severe postoperative instability (which was often associated with rotator cuff and shoulder capsule injury). A postoperative brachial plexopathy developed in 1 patient, and hematomas developed in 2 patients. Heterotopic ossification developed in 1 patient. A deep infection developed in 1 patient. Subsequent periprosthetic humeral fractures developed in 2 patients.

Comment: these procedures are obviously not to be undertaken lightly by either the surgeon or the patient. While these authors were quite successful in obtaining tuberosity osteotomy healing, this can be a problem because of (1) retraction of the cuff muscles, (2) limited 'landing site' for the repositioned tuberosity, and (3) problems in protecting the osteotomy during healing.


To learn more about shoulder arthritis and what can be done about it, see the Shoulder Arthritis Book.

To learn more about the rotator cuff, see the Rotator Cuff Book

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Consultation for those who live a distance away from Seattle.

**Check out the new Shoulder Arthritis Book - click here.**

Click here to see the new Rotator Cuff Book

To see the topics covered in this Blog, click here

Use the "Search" box to the right to find other topics of interest to you.

You may be interested in some of our most visited web pages including:shoulder arthritis, total shoulder, ream and runreverse total shoulderCTA arthroplasty, and rotator cuff surgery as well as the 'ream and run essentials'


Thursday, December 26, 2013

The effect of income, race and gender on outcome of joint arthroplasty. The 4Ps

Impact of Socioeconomic Factors on Outcome of Total Knee Arthroplasty

These authors sought evidence on the impact of socioeconomic factors on the outcome of total knee arthroplasty in patients under 60 years of age. As is the case for the post from December 20, this fits nicely with the concept that the outcome of any arthroplasty depends on the 4Ps: the problem, the patient, the procedure and the physician performing the surgery. While prior studies have focused primarily on surgical technique, implant details, and individual patient clinical factors, the focus here is on patient demographics and socioeconomic factors.

They surveyed 661 patients (average age, 54 years; range, 18–60 years; 61% female) 1 to 4 years after undergoing modern primary TKA for noninflammatory arthritis at five orthopaedic centers. Interestingly the data were collected by an independent third party with expertise in collecting healthcare data for state and federal agencies and blinded to all details regarding the patient and the care rendered. 

They found that patients reporting incomes of less than $25,000 were less likely to be satisfied with arthroplasty outcomes and more likely to have functional limitations after surgery than patients with higher incomes. Women were less likely to be satisfied and more likely to have functional limitations than men, and minority patients were more likely to have functional limitations than nonminority patients. The type of implant was not associated with outcomes after surgery. Household income was more important than minority status in predisposing to suboptimal results. After adjusting for socioeconomic factors, minority patients (Hispanic and black) reported inferior results on the functional outcome measures. 

They conclude that socioeconomic factors, in particular low income, are more strongly associated with satisfaction and functional outcomes in young patients after arthroplasty than demographic or implant factors. 

Since different clinical case series will have different mixes of diagnoses (the problem), patient factors (age, gender, overall health, socioeconomic factors, ethnicity, and insurance coverage), prostheses, and levels of physician experience, comparisons between studies will need to carefully control for these key variables.  It is also apparent that these factors may not be independent one of the others. Less healthy, less wealthy, more severely affected, patients may be more likely to receive care by less experienced surgeons, for example (N.B. this study only included high volume centers so that the effect of income, ethnicity, surgeon volume, etc may have been less than when 'all comers' are included).

The bottom line is that even though there is much marketing of the 'advantages' of one prosthesis over another, the problem, the patient and the physician are likely to be the more important of the "P"s in affecting the result of surgery.

The effect of race and income observed here has importance with respect to health care policy, access to health care, and profiling of hospitals and physicians with respect to the outcome of arthroplasty.

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Consultation for those who live a distance away from Seattle.

**Check out the new Shoulder Arthritis Book - click here.**

To see the topics covered in this Blog, click here

Use the "Search" box to the right to find other topics of interest to you.

You may be interested in some of our most visited web pages including:shoulder arthritis, total shoulder, ream and run, reverse total shoulder, CTA arthroplasty, and rotator cuff surgery as well as the 'ream and run essentials'

See from which cities our patients come.

Friday, December 28, 2012

Resection arthroplasty

Resection arthroplasty for failed shoulder arthroplasty



This is a Level IV  review of 26 patients who underwent resection arthroplasty  at a mean follow-up of 41.8 months (range, 12-130 months) after a prior shoulder arthroplasty (total shoulder, hemiarthroplasty or reverse total shoulder). The procedures were performed at 5 different centers. The number of patients having resection arthroplasty at these centers but who were not available for follow-up is not known.

 At follow-up, the average VAS pain score was  3.2 ± 2.5 (0-10), the average Constant Score (for 21 of the shoulders) was  27.3 ± 12.5 (3-53), and the average forward elevation was 46.7 ±  29.1 degrees (0-100).

The most impressive aspect of this series was that 22 of the 26 resection arthroplasties were for arthroplasties that had become infected. The organisms responsible for the infections were not identified. Infection was not identified in the remaining four, however the protocol for culturing the shoulders was not explained. 

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You may be interested in some of our most visited web pages including:shoulder arthritis, total shoulder, ream and runreverse total shoulderCTA arthroplasty,  and rotator cuff surgery.


Sunday, November 18, 2012

Clinical results of revision shoulder arthroplasty using the reverse prosthesis. JSES

Clinical results of revision shoulder arthroplasty using the reverse prosthesis. JSES

Thirty shoulder arthroplasties in 28 patients were revised for rotator cuff deficiency , instability,  fracture, glenoid deficiency, and sepsis using a reverse total shoulder. Fifteen shoulders had complications of the revision of which seven required at least one additional surgery. The article illustrates methods for humeral component removal, humeral reconstruction with graft and glenoid reconstruction with graft. 

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Use the "Search the Blog" box to the right to find other topics of interest to you. 

You may be interested in some of our most visited web pages including:shoulder arthritis, total shoulder, ream and runreverse total shoulderCTA arthroplasty, and rotator cuff surgery.