Forty-five athletes with either a partial or a complete tear of the
rotator cuff were treated with anterior acromioplasty and repair of the
tear. The minimum duration of follow-up was twenty-four months (average,
forty-two months). Thirty patients had an incomplete tear and fifteen had a
complete tear. Postoperatively, thirty-nine (87 per cent) of the patients
stated that they were improved compared with their preoperative status,
although only thirty-four patients (76 per cent) felt that they had a
significant reduction of pain postoperatively. Objectively, twenty-five (56
per cent) of the patients were rated as having a good result, which allowed
them to return to their former competitive level without significant pain.
Twelve (41 per cent) of the twenty-nine athletes who had been involved in
pitching and throwing returned to their former competitive status. Seven
(32 per cent) of the twenty-two pitchers and throwers who had been active
at a professional or collegiate level returned to the same competitive
level. In our experience, a repair of the rotator cuff combined with an
acromioplasty in a young athletic population provides satisfactory relief
of pain but does not guarantee that the patient will be able to return to
his or her former competitive status in all sports.