Rehabilitation following shoulder arthroscopic stabilisation surgery: A survey of UK practice.
- Resource Type
- Article
- Authors
- Maher, Natasha; Willmore, Elaine; Bateman, Marcus; Blacknall, James; Chester, Rachel; Horsley, Ian; Gibson, Jo; O' Sullivan, Joel; Jaggi, Anju
- Source
- Shoulder & Elbow. Feb2024, Vol. 16 Issue 1, p85-97. 13p.
- Subject
- *SPORTS re-entry
*ARTHROSCOPY
*SHOULDER
*REHABILITATION
*MANUAL labor
*CONTACT sports
- Language
- ISSN
- 1758-5732
Background: Optimal rehabilitation following arthroscopic shoulder stabilisation for traumatic anterior instability is unknown. The purpose of this study was to establish current UK practice for this patient group. Methods: A self-administered online questionnaire was developed and distributed to UK surgeons and physiotherapists. Results: 138 responses were received. Routine immobilisation was reported in 79.7% of responses with a cross-body sling being the preferred position (63.4%). Duration of immobilisation and timescales to initiate movement were highly variable. Return to light work was advised when patients felt able (25.4%) or after 6 weeks (26.1%). 58.7% recommended waiting for 12 weeks to return to manual work. 56% recommended non-contact sport could be resumed after 12 weeks. For contact sport, recommendations varied from 6 weeks (3.8%) to 6 months (5.8%). Psychological readiness was the most frequently cited criteria for return to play (58.6%). Factors such as hyperlaxity (40.6%), age (32.6%) and kinesiophobia (28.3%) were not considered as relevant as reported quality of surgical fixation (50%). Conclusion: There is no clear consensus regarding optimal post-operative rehabilitation following arthroscopic shoulder stabilisation. Further work is required to establish high value, personalised pathways for this patient group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]