Background: Good functional results have been reported for
arthroscopic repair of rotator cuff tears, but the rate of tendon-to-bone
healing is still unknown. Our hypothesis was that arthroscopic repair of
full-thickness supraspinatus tears achieves a rate of complete tendon healing
equivalent to those reported in the literature with open or mini-open
techniques.
Methods: Sixty-five consecutive shoulders with a chronic
full-thickness supraspinatus tear were repaired arthroscopically in sixty-five
patients with use of a tension-band suture technique. Patients ranged in age
from twenty-nine to seventy-nine years. The average duration of follow-up was
twenty-nine months. Fifty-one patients (fifty-one shoulders) had a computed
tomographic arthrogram, and fourteen had a magnetic resonance imaging scan,
performed between six months and three years after surgery. All patients were
assessed with regard to function and the strength of the shoulder
elevation.
Results: The rotator cuff was completely healed and watertight in
forty-six (71%) of the sixty-five patients and was partially healed in three.
Although the supraspinatus tendon did not heal to the tuberosity in sixteen
shoulders, the size of the persistent defect was smaller than the initial tear
in fifteen. Sixty-two of the sixty-five patients were satisfied with the
result. The Constant score improved from an average (and standard deviation)
of 51.6 ± 10.6 points preoperatively to 83.8 ± 10.3 points at
the time of the last follow-up evaluation (p < 0.001), and the average
University of California at Los Angeles score improved from 11.5 ± 1.1
to 32.3 ± 1.3 (p < 0.001). The average strength of the shoulder
elevation was significantly better (p = 0.001) when the tendon had healed (7.3
± 2.9 kg) than when it had not (4.7 ± 1.9 kg). Factors that were
negatively associated with tendon healing were increasing age and associated
delamination of the subscapularis or infraspinatus tendon. Only ten (43%) of
twenty-three patients over the age of sixty-five years had completely healed
tendons (p < 0.001).
Conclusions: Arthroscopic repair of an isolated supraspinatus
detachment commonly leads to complete tendon healing. The absence of healing
of the repaired rotator cuff is associated with inferior strength. Patients
over the age of sixty-five years (p = 0.001) and patients with associated
delamination of the subscapularis and/or the infraspinatus (p = 0.02) have
significantly lower rates of healing.
Level of Evidence: Therapeutic Level IV. See Instructions
to Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.