CEPCO – Centre Epaule Coude

PD Dr. Gregory Cunningham

Shoulder and Elbow Surgery

Dr. Maud Tartarat

Trauma and rehabilitation medicine

Dr-Jeremie

Dr. Jeremie Dor

Orthopaedics and traumatology Surgeon

Villa Fleurie
Orthopedic Center

Practice Location

Office Hours

Monday-Friday: 8-12h and 13-17h

Contact

Phone : +41 22 702 25 81
Mail : secretariat@cepco.ch

Address

Chem. Thury 7b, 1206 Genève
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A difficult case ?

Details

Who

Surgeons, Radiologists and Therapists

Meeting

Every first Monday of the month

Address

Chem. Thury 7b, 1206 Genève
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Scientific publications

Does surgery for instability of the shoulder truly stabilize the glenohumeral joint?: A prospective comparative cohort study

Published on : 13/03/2025

Publication: Medicine (Baltimore). 2016 Aug;95(31):e4369. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000004369.

Co-authors: Lädermann A, Denard PJ, Chagué S, Cunningham G, Charbonnier C.

Abstract:

Despite the fact that surgery is commonly used to treat glenohumeral instability, there is no evidence that such treatment effectively corrects glenohumeral translation. The purpose of this prospective clinical study was to analyze the effect of surgical stabilization on glenohumeral translation. Glenohumeral translation was assessed in 11 patients preoperatively and 1 year postoperatively following surgical stabilization for anterior shoulder instability. Translation was measured using optical motion capture and computed tomography. Preoperatively, anterior translation of the affected shoulder was bigger in comparison to the normal contralateral side. Differences were significant for flexion and abduction movements (P < 0.001). Postoperatively, no patients demonstrated apprehension and all functional scores were improved. Despite absence of apprehension, postoperative anterior translation for the surgically stabilized shoulders was not significantly different from the preoperative values. While surgical treatment for anterior instability limits the chance of dislocation, it does not seem to restore glenohumeral translation during functional range of motion. Such persistent microinstability may explain residual pain, apprehension, inability to return to activity and even emergence of dislocation arthropathy that is seen in some patients. Further research is necessary to better understand the causes, effects, and treatment of residual microinstability following surgical stabilization of the shoulder.