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      Functional outcome after open and arthroscopic Bankart repair for traumatic shoulder instability

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          Both open and arthroscopic Bankart repair are established procedures in the treatment of anterior shoulder instability. While the open procedure is still considered as the "golden standard" functional outcome is supposed to be better in the arthroscopic procedure. The aim of this retrospective study was to compare the functional outcome between open and arthroscopic Bankart repair.

          Materials and methods

          In 199 patients a Bankart procedure with suture anchors was performed, either arthroscopically in presence of an detached, but not elongated capsulolabral complex (40) or open (159). After a median time of 31 months (12 to 67 months) 174 patients were contacted and agreed to follow-up, 135 after open and 39 after arthroscopic Bankart procedure.

          Results

          Re-dislocations occurred in 8% after open and 15% after arthroscopic Bankart procedure. After open surgery 4 of the 11 re-dislocations occurred after a new adequate trauma and 1 of the 6 re-dislocations after arthroscopic surgery. Re-dislocations after arthroscopic procedure occured earlier than after open Bankart repair. An external rotation lag of 20° or more was observed more often (16%) after open than after arthroscopic surgery (3%). The Rowe score demonstrated "good" or "excellent" functional results in 87% after open and in 80% patients after arthroscopic treatment.

          Conclusion

          In this retrospective investigation the open Bankart procedure demonstrated good functional results. The arthroscopic treatment without capsular shift resulted in a better range of motion, but showed a tendency towards more frequently and earlier recurrence of instability. Sensitive patient selection for arthroscopic Bankart repair is recommended especially in patients with more than five dislocations.

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          Most cited references41

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          The Bankart procedure: a long-term end-result study.

          Of 161 patients with 162 shoulders operated on during a thirty-year period (1946 to 1976), 124 were re-examined and twenty-one answered a questionnaire. The lesions found at surgery were separation of the capsule from the anterior glenoid rim in 85 per cent, a Hill-Sachs lesion of the humeral head in 77 per cent, and damage to the anterior glenoid rim (including fracture) in 73 per cent. There were five recurrences (3.5 per cent) after repair by the method described in the 145 shoulders that were followed. Only one of the forty-six patients with dislocation on the dominant side and one of the thirty-one with dislocation on the non-dominant side failed to return to the competitive athletic activities in which they participated prior to injury. The results at follow-up were rated excellent in 74 per cent, good in 23 per cent, and poor in 3 per cent. Ninety-eight per cent of the patients rated their result as excellent or good. Sixty-nine per cent of the shoulders had a full range of motion, and only 2 per cent of these shoulders redislocated. A fracture of the rim of the glenoid did not increase the risk of recurrence, while a moderate to severe Hill-Sachs lesion increased the risk only slightly. We concluded that with the meticulous technique of the Bankart repair as described, postoperative immobilization is not necessary, early return of motion and function can be expected, and resumption of athletic activities with no limitation of shoulder motion is possible for most patients.
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            Inferior capsular shift for involuntary inferior and multidirectional instability of the shoulder. A preliminary report.

            In thirty-six patients (forty shoulders) with involuntary inferior and multidirectional subluxation and dislocation, there had been failure of standard operations or uncertainty regarding diagnosis or treatment. Clinical evaluation of these patients stressed meticulous psychiatric appraisal, conservative treatment, and repeated examination of the shoulder. All patients were treated by an inferior capsular shift, a procedure in which a flap of the capsule reinforced by overlying tendon is shifted to reduce capsular and ligamentous redundancy on all three sides. This technique offers the advantage of correcting multidirectional instability through one incision without damage to the articular surface. One shoulder began subluxating again within seven months after operation, but there have been no other unsatisfactory results to date. Seventeen shoulders were followed for more than two years.
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              The pathology and treatment of recurrent dislocation of the shoulder-joint

              A. Bankart (1938)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Eur J Med Res
                Eur. J. Med. Res
                European Journal of Medical Research
                BioMed Central
                0949-2321
                2047-783X
                2009
                28 January 2009
                : 14
                : 1
                : 18-24
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Orthopaedic Surgery (Head of the Department: Prof. Dr. K.-P. Günther), University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Medical Falculty of the Technical University of Dresden, Germany
                [2 ]Clinical Epidemiology and Health Economy Unit at the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery (Head of the Unit: Prof. Dr. F. Krummenauer), University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Medical Falculty of the Technical University of Dresden, Germany
                Article
                2047-783X-14-1-18
                10.1186/2047-783X-14-1-18
                3352200
                19258206
                7d10f7eb-4ff8-4825-adaf-0b5a7cba405f
                Copyright ©2009 I. Holzapfel Publishers
                History
                : 15 February 2008
                : 19 June 2008
                Categories
                Research

                Medicine
                bankart procedure,open versus arthroscopic procedure,traumatic shoulder instability

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