肩袖修复的结果:糖尿病或高脂血症患者的开放与关节镜入路

Journal of orthopaedics and sports medicine Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-05-15 DOI:10.26502/josm.511500201
Kevin Babakhan Vartanian, Kevin Ghookas, Tony Eskandar, Niayesh Najafi, Devendra K Agrawal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

肩袖损伤是肩部功能障碍的常见原因,糖尿病和高脂血症会导致肌腱易损性增加和愈合受损。在这篇文章中,对具有这些代谢疾病的患者进行开放式和关节镜下肩袖修复(RCR)的比较结果进行了关键的评估。研究结果表明,与开放式RCR相比,关节镜RCR具有减少组织破坏、缩短恢复时间和降低感染率等优势,使其成为代谢受损患者的首选。然而,开放式RCR提供了更好的可视化和结构支持,以及更好的功能,使广泛肌腱损伤的患者受益。糖尿病患者的复发率和感染率高于非糖尿病患者,特别是开放性RCR患者,而高脂血症患者表现出肌腱愈合受损和术后并发症增加,他汀类药物治疗的效果好坏参半。尽管有这些发现,现有的研究缺乏大规模的对照研究,直接比较这些高危人群的手术结果。考虑到与糖尿病和高脂血症相关的慢性炎症和代谢损伤,手术决定应根据患者的具体因素,包括脂质和血糖控制、肌腱完整性和撕裂严重程度。关节镜手术似乎是更好的选择,因为它可以最大限度地减少手术创伤,降低撕裂率和更快地恢复工作时间;同时,在需要广泛干预的情况下,开放式修复仍然很有价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Outcomes of Rotator Cuff Repair: Open vs. Arthroscopic Approaches in Patients with Diabetes or Hyperlipidemia.

Rotator cuff injuries are a common cause of shoulder dysfunction, with diabetes mellitus and hyperlipidemia contributing to increased tendon vulnerability and impaired healing. In this article, a critical evaluation is presented on the comparative outcomes of open versus arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (RCR) in patients with these metabolic conditions. Findings suggest that arthroscopic RCR compared to open RCR offers advantages such as reduced tissue disruption, shorter recovery times, and lower infection rates, making it a preferred choice for metabolically compromised patients. However, open RCR provides superior visualization and structural support, as well as better function, benefiting patients with extensive tendon damage. In diabetics there was higher retear and infection rates than non-diabetics, particularly with open RCR, while those with hyperlipidemia exhibited impaired tendon healing and increased postoperative complications, with mixed effects from statin therapy. Despite these findings, existing research lacks large-scale, controlled studies directly comparing surgical outcomes in these high-risk populations. Given the chronic inflammatory and metabolic impairments associated with diabetes mellitus and hyperlipidemia, surgical decisions should be tailored to patient-specific factors, including lipid and glycemic control, tendon integrity, and tear severity. Arthroscopy appears to be the preferable option due to minimizing surgical trauma, lower retear rates and faster return-to-work times; meanwhile, open repair remains valuable in cases requiring extensive intervention.

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