Internal Impingement of the Shoulder: Difference between revisions

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#<u>Stage I</u>: early Shoulder stiffness and a prolonged warm-up period; discomfort in throwers occurs in the late-cocking and early acceleration phases of throwing; no pain is reported with activities of daily living.  
#<u>Stage I</u>: early Shoulder stiffness and a prolonged warm-up period; discomfort in throwers occurs in the late-cocking and early acceleration phases of throwing; no pain is reported with activities of daily living.  
#<u>Stage II</u>: intermediate Pain localized to the posterior shoulder in the late-cocking and early acceleration phases of throwing; pain with activities of daily living and instability are unusual.
#<u>Stage II</u>: intermediate Pain localized to the posterior shoulder in the late-cocking and early acceleration phases of throwing; pain with activities of daily living and instability are unusual.  
#<u>Stage III</u>: advanced Similar to those in stage II in patients who have been refractory to nonoperative treatment modalities.
#<u>Stage III</u>: advanced Similar to those in stage II in patients who have been refractory to nonoperative treatment modalities.



Revision as of 01:12, 23 November 2010

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The diagnosis of internal impingement based on history alone is extremely difficult, and symptoms tend to be variable and fairly nonspecific. (heyworth) Because of the variable presentation, understanding the likely patient population and the clinical presentation of internal impingement is critical to identifying this disorder. A review of the literature does show several common symptoms that most internal impingement patients seem to share.

Internal Impingement patients present with:

Posterior Shoulder Pain

  • Chronic - diffuse posterior shoulder girdle pain is commonly the presenting complaint in the throwing athlete, but the pain may be localized to the joint line. (heyworth) The patient may describe the onset of posterior shoulder pain, particularly during the late-cocking phase of throwing, when the arm is in 90° of abduction and full external rotation. (Behrens)
  • Acute – there have been numerous case series that have shown that there are large numbers of non-throwing athletes who also present with this syndrome with the chief complaint being acute shoulder pain following injury rather than the chronic variety previously mentioned.

Decrease in throwing velocity - a progressive decrease in throwing velocity or loss of control and performance in the overhead athlete.

Muscular asymmetry - Overhead athletes and throwers in particular often have muscular asymmetry between the dominant and the nondominant shoulder.

Increased Laxity - A patient with isolated internal impingement may have an increase in global laxity or an increase in anterior translation alone of the dominant shoulder. (drakos)

Instability - patients may have instability symptoms, such as apprehension or the sensation of Subluxation with the arm in a position of abduction and external rotation. (heyworth)

“Dead arm” - Some signs of the pathologic process include a so-called “dead arm,” the feeling of shoulder and arm weakness after throwing, and a subjective sense of slipping of the shoulder (behrens)

RC disease symptoms - patients may also present with symptoms similar to those associated with classic rotator cuff disease. Younger patients with such symptoms, particularly throwing athletes, should raise the clinician’s index of suspicion for internal impingement. In fact, some authors have identified internal impingement as the leading cause of rotator cuff lesions in athletes.

Jobe Clinical Classification of Internal Impingement
Jobe7 developed a classification scheme to further distinguish between the varying severities of internal impingement . (Behrens)The Jobe stage symptoms focuses on the primary patient population of overhead athletes.

  1. Stage I: early Shoulder stiffness and a prolonged warm-up period; discomfort in throwers occurs in the late-cocking and early acceleration phases of throwing; no pain is reported with activities of daily living.
  2. Stage II: intermediate Pain localized to the posterior shoulder in the late-cocking and early acceleration phases of throwing; pain with activities of daily living and instability are unusual.
  3. Stage III: advanced Similar to those in stage II in patients who have been refractory to nonoperative treatment modalities.

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