Abstract

BackgroundAfferent innervation of shoulder joints plays a fundamental role in nociception and mechanoception and its alteration result in shoulder´s disease that course with pain and functional disability. MethodsJoints shoulder from healthy subjects (n = 20) and with chronic pain shoulder syndromes (n = 17) were analyzed using immunohistochemistry for S100 protein to identify nerve structures (nerve fibers and sensory corpuscles), coupled with a quantification of the sensory formations. Sensory nerve formations were quantified in 13 distinct areas in healthy joint shoulder and in the available equivalent areas in the pathological joints. Statistical analyses were conducted to assess differences between healthy shoulder and pathological shoulder joint (p< 0.05). ResultsAll analyzed structures, i.e., glenohumeral capsule, acromioclavicular capsule, the extraarticular structures (subcoracoid region and subacromio-subdeltoid bursa) and intraarticular structures (biceps brachii tendon and labrum articulare) are variably innervated except the extrinsic coracoacromial ligament, which was aneural. The afferent innervation of healthy human shoulder joints consists of free nerve endings, simple lamellar corpuscles and Ruffini’s corpuscles. Occasionally, Golgi-Mazzoni’s and Pacinian corpuscles were found. However, the relative density of each one varied among joints and/or the different zones within the same joint. As a rule, the upper half and anterior half of healthy glenohumeral capsules have a higher innervation compared to the lower and posterior respectably. On the other hand, in joints from subjects suffering chronic shoulder pain, a reduced innervation was found, involving more the corpuscles than free nerve endings. ConclusionsOur findings report a global innervation map of the human shoulder joints, especially the glenohumeral one, and this knowledge might be of interest for arthroscopic surgeons allowing to develop more selective and unhurt treatments, controlling the pain, and avoiding the loss of afferent innervation after surgical procedures. To the light of our results the postero-inferior glenohumeral capsular region seems to be the more adequate to be a surgical portal (surgical access area) to prevent nerve lesions.

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