Abstract

IntroductionEndoscopic clavicular resection is a common procedure, but few studies have analyzed predictive factors for outcome. Hypotheses1) Computed tomography (CT) of clavicular resection is reproductible; 2) Functional outcome correlates with resection length; 3) Other factors also influence outcome. Material and methodsPatients operated on between 2005 and 2010 were called back to establish functional scores (Constant, Simple Shoulder Test [SST], satisfaction) and undergo low-dose bilateral comparative computed tomography (CT) centered on the acromioclavicular joints. The assessment criteria were resection edge parallelism and resection length, measured using OsiriX® software. Radiological and clinical data were correlated. Results18 out of 21 patients (85%: 3 female, 15 male) were assessed. Mean age at surgery was 49 years (range, 40–62 yrs); mean follow-up was 4.2 years (1.6–7.2 yrs). Mean Constant score rose from 57.7 (25–85) to 70.2 (30–96); mean postoperative SST was 9.3 (3–12). 11 patients had very good and 4 poor results. CT resection length was reproducible, with intraclass, intra- and interobserver correlation coefficients >95%. There was no significant correlation between articular resection length on CT and functional scores (P=0.2). Functional scores were negatively influenced by an occupational pathologic context (P<0.01) and by associated tendinopathy. Discussion and conclusionLow-dose CT enabled reproducible analysis of clavicular resection. The hypothesized correlation between resection length and functional result was not confirmed. Work accidents and occupational disease emerged as risk factors. Level of evidenceSingle-center retrospective analytic cohort study. Level 4, guideline grade C.

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