It is my pleasure to introduce Associate Professor Mark Haber.
Speaker:He's an experienced and highly skilled shoulder specialist.
Speaker:And Dr. Haber uses the latest shoulder arthroscopy and techniques to address
Speaker:shoulder pain and rotator cuff tears.
Speaker:He's performed over 2,000 shoulder arthroscopies during his career.
Speaker:I'd say plenty more than that now. This is an old profile.
Speaker:And continues to pioneer advanced techniques due to improve surgical outcomes
Speaker:and reduce recovery times.
Speaker:Dr. Haber is honoured to have been the first surgeon in Australia to perform
Speaker:a computer-assisted shoulder surgery in Sydney in January 2017,
Speaker:so a very historic move, Haber.
Speaker:And he's renowned among his peers and is recognised as a pioneer of shoulder
Speaker:surgery, teaching, and advanced arthroscopic techniques to shoulder surgeons
Speaker:and shoulder specialists across Australia, Asia and Europe.
Speaker:So thank you very much for speaking today and I hope you'll see you.
Speaker:Okay, so thank you very much for the introduction, and we missed the first slide,
Speaker:which is reminding me to thank you, all you guys, for missing your day out in
Speaker:the beautiful sunshine to spend there with us, so I hope we make it worth your
Speaker:while, so thank you very much for coming. I really appreciate it.
Speaker:And the topics I've been told to cover is how did arthritis affect shoulders,
Speaker:when to refer, how do we assess, what can be done to reduce pain and surgical intervention?
Speaker:So I'll try and cover those. I don't think I've got any particular disclosures, but on location.
Speaker:So anatomically, I'm very, very, very specific. I only do elective shoulder
Speaker:surgery. I only do four operations.
Speaker:So I'm geographically a bit more spread. Outside of Macquarie,
Speaker:I also consult out of Wollongong, Sydney CBD, and also in Campbelltown.
Speaker:So when we look at common shoulder conditions, I'd love to discuss them all.
Speaker:But really, when we talk about rotator cuff tears and osteoarthritis,
Speaker:they're very closely interconnected, something called rotator cuff tear arthropathy,
Speaker:which is the majority of people with arthritis.
Speaker:So how does arthritis affect shoulders? It's a bit unique.
Speaker:I started looking at a clinical course of shoulder pain. Basically,
Speaker:the three worst symptoms were they sleep less well,
Speaker:they're less physical recreation, and the combination of that makes a more irritable,
Speaker:huge impact on their quality of life.
Speaker:And because shoulders more than hips and knees affects their ability to sleep,
Speaker:it probably has a more profound effect on quality of life, not just activity.
Speaker:Now, we'll talk more about MRIs and what is arthritis, but generally there's
Speaker:the shoulder joint, but you've got to be very careful with MRIs because they
Speaker:always report acromioclavicular joint arthritis. They'll never just say it's normal.
Speaker:Now, the unique thing about shoulders is it's the most mobile joint in the animal kingdom,
Speaker:but is also the most unstable joint in the animal kingdom because the ball is
Speaker:a decent ball, but the socket's almost completely flat, and the deltoid is the
Speaker:powerhouse which moves the shoulder.
Speaker:The deltoid spreads, covers the shoulder from front to middle to back,
Speaker:and it is the powerhouse of the shoulder joint, which introduces unique issues,
Speaker:which we'll discuss as we go,
Speaker:because as you know, the rotator cuff in the front subscap,
Speaker:in the top supra, in the back infraspinatus, it's the rotator cuff that holds
Speaker:the ball in the socket and always has to fight against the deltoid.
Speaker:So you've got the deltoid which cloaks it. The deltoid lifts the arm up,
Speaker:but it's the rotator cuff which holds it down.
Speaker:And as we said, the deltoid lifts the arm up. The rotator cuff,
Speaker:like your sleeve, is a cuff.
Speaker:It surrounds the shoulder joint. They're not independent tendons,
Speaker:as opposed to this model.
Speaker:So when the deltoid lifts it up and the shoulder moves around,
Speaker:it's the bursa that lies in between that lubricates it all. You've got to be
Speaker:careful because every investigation under the sun always says there's bursitis.
Speaker:Now, not everybody on the planet has bursitis. It's a meaningless term. It means nothing.
Speaker:What is bursitis? I could dedicate an hour's talk just on that alone.
Speaker:Now, the unique thing about rotator cuff tendons, which is not true for hips
Speaker:and knees, is they wear out.
Speaker:Now, that's unique. So in the shoulder joint, what wears out,
Speaker:it's the tendons and the joint. So they can do it together or they can do it separately.
Speaker:Now, but they tend to do it together. The tendons tend to fail,
Speaker:as does the joint fail. And it's a term called a calf tear arthropathy.
Speaker:So when the tendons fail, you get superior upward migration of the humeral head,
Speaker:which is very, very common in arthritic patients to varying degrees and completely
Speaker:has changed the way we manage shoulder arthritis.
Speaker:Due to the gross instability and the reliance on the tendons.
Speaker:So this is an example of an x-ray where you can see that the humeral head is
Speaker:sitting on the acromion and the glenoid is grounding through the humeral head.
Speaker:So it's a unique thing. Cuff tarotrop is a unique thing which is very dissimilar.
Speaker:From the hips and the knees.
Speaker:So just last week, we CT navigate all our shoulder placements.
Speaker:And I just had a patient last week where I saw it was a classic.
Speaker:You can see the ball looks all right. The head looks kind of all right,
Speaker:but you can see the ball doesn't sit in the socket anymore.
Speaker:So this is a really typical example of a cuff tear arthropathy where the humeral
Speaker:head's grinding on their chromium and not sitting properly in the glenule anymore.
Speaker:So that's a cuff tear arthropathy. And these massive tears are often associated
Speaker:with what we call pseudoparalysis, secondary to a massive rotator cuff tear,
Speaker:but it's not a neurological lesion, but it does have the equivalent.
Speaker:They can't raise their arm, even if they've got range of motion.
Speaker:I use an allergy, it's the toe bar of your car.
Speaker:You need a stable ball and socket joint for the shoulder to work properly.
Speaker:The deltoid lifts the shoulder up. It's the humeral head that holds it down
Speaker:so that you've got stability, so they get what's like a non-neurological paralysis.
Speaker:Now, in terms of ongoing management, it's all about diagnosis.
Speaker:So it's all about the horse before the car. You have to make a diagnosis before
Speaker:you manage patients because in shoulders, I think it's a much more complex diagnosis.
Speaker:And we see so many errors in management, not by GPs, of course,
Speaker:where, for example, I've seen another patient last week had a year of physiotherapy
Speaker:for a frozen shoulder, and they had arthritis.
Speaker:Now, a year of physio, and we see that a lot. So how do we diagnose shoulder
Speaker:arthritis? Again, it's unique.
Speaker:Glyner-humeral instability for young people, and as you get older, it disappears.
Speaker:Capsulitis is almost unique in their 50s. So when you say it's a frozen shoulder,
Speaker:it's almost unique in their 50s.
Speaker:It rarely occurs outside of that age group.
Speaker:But rotator cuffs just wear out with age, as does the shoulder joint, just wears out with age.
Speaker:But the unique thing about pure osteoarthritis tends to be 10,
Speaker:20 years after hips and knees.
Speaker:So when they're pure arthritis, tends to be much older patients in their 70s
Speaker:plus. So totally different populations.
Speaker:So when we diagnose, we've got to examine the patient, and the tradition is to look, feel, and move.
Speaker:But the challenging issue in the shoulder is you can neither see nor feel anything
Speaker:because the entire shoulder is cloaked by the deltoid.
Speaker:The only thing you can actually feel is the AC joint, which you'd possibly argue
Speaker:is not even the shoulder joint.
Speaker:But it's the only palpable structure of the shoulder joint is the AC joint.
Speaker:All the other intra-articular structures, labrum, capsule, biceps,
Speaker:you can't palpate them. and the patients say their shoulders always click,
Speaker:it doesn't really help us make the diagnosis.
Speaker:So unless they localize and you've got localized AC joint, then the touching
Speaker:doesn't help. But the range of motion really does help.
Speaker:Forward elevation, external rotation, internal rotation.
Speaker:If they've got a global restriction range of motion, they tend to be tagged
Speaker:to have a frozen shoulder. And a frozen shoulder means nothing.
Speaker:It means they're stiff and sore. So the general trend or the recommendations
Speaker:is that frozen shoulder gets chucked in the bin. It's a useless term.
Speaker:But if they're elderly, it's not a frozen shoulder.
Speaker:Think arthritis. If they're stiff and sore and they're elderly, think arthritis.
Speaker:And as has already been discussed earlier today, you know, sometimes they just need an x-ray.
Speaker:It can be diagnostic. But if they're elderly with rotator cuff tear,
Speaker:it's still worth getting an x-ray because they can have cuff tereflopathy,
Speaker:upward migration of the humeral head, arthritis, as well as rotator cuff tear,
Speaker:because in the early, it goes hand in hand.
Speaker:And osteoarthritis x-rays are totally diagnostic, so you don't need MRIs.
Speaker:So this is what a normal x-ray should look like. A beautiful humeral head,
Speaker:a beautiful glenoid, a gap in the middle, which is the joint space,
Speaker:and a gap between the acromion and the humeral head, roughly between 7 and 13 millimeters.
Speaker:But if the humeral head's touching the acromion, they've got a massive cuff
Speaker:tear. They've got a cuff tear arthropathy.
Speaker:So here's a normal x-ray as we've shown.
Speaker:Early arthritis, where you see a spur. Severe arthritis, when you see gross
Speaker:destruction of the joint.
Speaker:Now, the spur of the shoulder joint has got a unique name. It's called a goat's beard.
Speaker:Oh, it didn't go. Where's my
Speaker:goat? There's the goat. It's called a goat's beard, and it's the big clue.
Speaker:So if they've got a goat's beard, they've got arthritis. So sometimes when they've
Speaker:got very mild arthritis, the only thing they've got is a goat's beard.
Speaker:The joint looks perfect. But if they've got a goat's beard, that's the clue
Speaker:that they've got arthritis.
Speaker:So if they're complaining of pain, get a plain x-ray.
Speaker:They've got a goat's beard, they've got arthritis. Sometimes it's severe,
Speaker:but it can be quite subtle.
Speaker:With cuffed arthropathy, again, you see upward migration of the humeral head.
Speaker:That's the glenod and the acromion where the humeral head's gliding on,
Speaker:but they've got their little goat speared.
Speaker:So they've got not just a massive tear, they've got a true cuffed arthropathy.
Speaker:And this is just an example of a severe case of upward migration of the humeral head.
Speaker:They're roting their acromion, they're upward migrated, they've got a spur.
Speaker:Classic severe cuffed arthropathy. And as discussed earlier today,
Speaker:the role of an MRI, you don't need an MRI.
Speaker:And again, the patients hate it, especially in the shoulder,
Speaker:because they're head first in the machine, and they hate that.
Speaker:In the rotator cuff, only when it's severe do we ever get an MRI.
Speaker:Osteoarthritis, there's really no point.
Speaker:There's no point. But the careful thing about MRIs is every time you get an
Speaker:MRI, every time, they'll say there's AC joint arthritis.
Speaker:And the number of patients sent to our rooms with AC joint arthritis,
Speaker:they'll never say that it's a normal age-related change because everybody in
Speaker:the planet over the age of the 60 has got an abnormal AC joint. That's normal.
Speaker:So that's not where the pain's coming from.
Speaker:So the MRI can show lots of other things.
Speaker:We don't have time to talk about MRI, but really shows a lot of things in the
Speaker:shoulder joint that an x-ray would have told us anyway. So there's really no point.
Speaker:Cuff to arthropathy, we do get MRI if we're looking at only cuff repair,
Speaker:not replacement, because it shows there's a retraction of the tendon and all
Speaker:the other arthritic changes.
Speaker:So we only do that if we think it's a cuff tear that needs to be fixed, not arthritis.
Speaker:And the other thing we see is what's called the Y view on the MRI.
Speaker:We can see what the normal muscles should look like.
Speaker:And this is what a cuff tear arthropathy looks like, where the muscle has degenerated away.
Speaker:You can see the size of the muscle, it's only tiny, and in the infraspinatus,
Speaker:it's half full of just fat. The muscle's gone.
Speaker:So as cuff terarthropathy deteriorates, the humeral head rides up,
Speaker:and both head and glenoid show the destruction of arthritis.
Speaker:CT, that's an example of what a CT looks like, but there's really no point in diagnostic.
Speaker:We get CT on all the patients who need shoulder replacements because we do navigation,
Speaker:but it plays no role in arthritis unless MRI is contraindicated.
Speaker:So now that we've made the diagnosis, how do we manage it?
Speaker:So once we've got the diagnosis, we can then plan the management.
Speaker:Our non-operative things are medications, physiotherapy.
Speaker:Now, medications, you know way more about it than I do. I won't comment.
Speaker:Physiotherapy, the physiotherapist isn't here, so I hope I don't offend anybody.
Speaker:And of course, injections play a huge role. and they almost,
Speaker:I would say they have to be ultrasound guided and we'll talk about that.
Speaker:Now lots of studies on physiotherapy management with shoulder arthritis as opposed
Speaker:to what we've heard earlier today, a study in 2023 looking at physiotherapy with osteoarthritis.
Speaker:What they looked at is the pre-op, the non-operative instead of shoulder placement.
Speaker:Post-op, that the quality of evidence is totally insufficient and the strength
Speaker:recommendation is one out of four.
Speaker:So while I'm a great fan of physiotherapy for everything else in the shoulder
Speaker:joint, it doesn't really have a role just in osteoarthritis.
Speaker:It doesn't have much role.
Speaker:We'll talk about it. But another study looking at 2 million people in the US at 24 only last year,
Speaker:concluded that individuals who had physical therapy as part of their non-surgical
Speaker:treatment did not have any decrease in the probability of requiring a shoulder replacement.
Speaker:So it doesn't actually change the inevitable.
Speaker:And another study in 23, two years ago, concluded there is some small but statistical
Speaker:significance of only short-term improvements in pain range of motion disability,
Speaker:but only in patients with mild arthritis on x-rays.
Speaker:So there is a role, but it's only a small role and doesn't change the natural history.
Speaker:Now, the other things are injections, which we've got PRP, hyaluronic acid, and cortisone.
Speaker:And this is a huge pet interest of mine, which I'll explain,
Speaker:again, because it has to be ultrasound-guided, I would recommend.
Speaker:Now, the injectable biologics, I'm sorry, stem cells and platelets cannot be
Speaker:recommended in glenohumeral joint arthritis.
Speaker:There's no paper that supports that 2020 report.
Speaker:Hyaluronic acid also strong evidence supports there's no benefit of hyaluronic
Speaker:acid in glenocumeral joint arthritis.
Speaker:15 years ago, I used to do knees and we used to do heaps of hyaluronic acid
Speaker:injections. I had a lot of faith in that, but just doesn't seem to work with shoulders.
Speaker:Now, steroid injections are one of the most effective treatments.
Speaker:Works as a powerful anti-inflammatory, reduces swelling, pain,
Speaker:and improves mobility in some people only.
Speaker:But it's all about where to do the injection, which is why we have to make the
Speaker:diagnosis. because in the shoulder joint, we've got the bursa,
Speaker:we've got the AC joint, we've got the glenohumeral joint, which also runs down
Speaker:into the long-headed biceps tendon.
Speaker:So in the shoulder joint, the joint itself and the bursa are two completely
Speaker:separate cavities if the rotator cuff is intact.
Speaker:If the rotator cuff is not intact, they're one cavity.
Speaker:But if the rotator cuff is intact, they're two cavities. You have to inject
Speaker:the right spot, which is why diagnosis really helps.
Speaker:So we'll talk about cortisone injections. I do a lot of them.
Speaker:I always warn patients, they do get a temporary soreness. It flares them up
Speaker:for 24 to 48 hours, and that's just normal and common and does resolve.
Speaker:But I warn them they should probably increase their analgesics for a day or
Speaker:two after the injection.
Speaker:Fortunately, the risk of infection, as we talked about, is extremely rare in shoulders.
Speaker:I touch wood, extremely rare. Now, about bleeding and bruising,
Speaker:which can occur with people on blood thinners, if they're on a Paxibane,
Speaker:it'd be nice if they could stop it for a diet too.
Speaker:But if they need to be on the aspirin, I don't think that's a contraindication.
Speaker:And we do a lot of, we inject them. If they're on aspirin, we don't worry about it.
Speaker:Allergic reaction is uncommon, but it's nice to know if we get referred patients
Speaker:if they have an allergic reaction.
Speaker:Diabetes is a big thing. Thank you.
Speaker:We've had a few patients who end up in intensive care after a cortisone injection.
Speaker:So we give them a smaller dose. We do a test. I tell them to monitor their sugars.
Speaker:It's very important if they're diabetic because we do a lot of cortisone injections
Speaker:and it's very important.
Speaker:They do also complain about facial flushing, mood changes, and insomnia after
Speaker:a decent dose of cortisone.
Speaker:So again, we just warn them that's just normal.
Speaker:The long-term effects, okay, there's cartilage damage and tendon weakening.
Speaker:But if they're going to have a joint replacement, I guess that doesn't really matter in the long term.
Speaker:So I've warned them about the time frame. Local anesthetic, they feel better.
Speaker:Oops, I've got to keep moving.
Speaker:Anyway, let me talk to you about ultrasound.
Speaker:Now, the thing about ultrasound, I've worked with sonographers for 15 years.
Speaker:I never consult without a sonographer.
Speaker:So we work together, as I said.
Speaker:And when we do cortisone injections, especially in the shoulder joint,
Speaker:we've got to work with a sonographer to make sure they track the needle so we
Speaker:get the right spot and we watch the needle go into the shoulder joint
Speaker:and we watch the fluid from the cortisone flush through the joint so we get
Speaker:100% confident we got the right spot because it is a test.
Speaker:Now, sometimes they're done to CT, they don't have time to talk about it,
Speaker:but CT, I think, is very uncomfortable.
Speaker:Patients hate it. I think it's totally unnecessary. So when to refer to an orthopedic
Speaker:surgeon, well, I'm happy to do injections you can refer to as we always do it.
Speaker:I'll skip through the cortisone because I want to talk about shoulder replacements.
Speaker:The indication of shoulder replacements is pain and impact on quality of life.
Speaker:Now, let me talk about reverses because it's quite a quirky thing.
Speaker:When we do a reverse replacement, we change the head for head,
Speaker:socket for socket, and it's like a golf ball sitting on a golf tee.
Speaker:As I said, the most unstable joint in the animal kingdom, an anatomic replacement
Speaker:has the issue that it is intrinsically unstable.
Speaker:So when you raise your arm up with your deltoid, again, as we talked about,
Speaker:you're relying on the rotator cuff to hold the ball in the socket.
Speaker:If the cuff fails, the replacement fails.
Speaker:So some 20, 30 years ago, they came up with the concept of providing stability.
Speaker:So that's the instability of an anatomic, what we call an anatomic.
Speaker:When the cuff fails, when you raise your arm, your replacement fails.
Speaker:It subluxes, and we see that heaps of times. They tried to make the socket better,
Speaker:didn't work, didn't provide the stability.
Speaker:So that's what an anatomic looks like, intrinsically unstable.
Speaker:So they came up with a concept 20, 30 years ago of trying to make it more stable.
Speaker:Unfortunately, they called it a reverse. So you put a socket where the ball
Speaker:is, you fix the ball where the socket is, and a poly in between.
Speaker:And so when you lift your arm up, it's totally stable. And this is an example, so animation.
Speaker:So where we show the shoulder is intrinsically unstable, the deltoid is always
Speaker:fighting against the rotator cuff.
Speaker:Unfortunately, the deltoid wins and the cuff fails in almost everybody.
Speaker:So you get upward migration of
Speaker:the humeral head. So they came up with a concept of fixing this problem.
Speaker:You put a ball where the socket is, you put a sock where the ball is,
Speaker:and it's grossly stable.
Speaker:The greatest advance in shoulder surgery. There's only one problem.
Speaker:This is an example of what it looks like.
Speaker:When you flex your deltoid, it's a stable joint, it stays.
Speaker:You can see the humeral head is depressed down and it stays there.
Speaker:It is way more successful.
Speaker:The problem is why call it a reverse?
Speaker:Patients freak out when you say we're going to do a reverse because reverse
Speaker:in English means we're going to do it backwards and they feel they're going to end up backwards.
Speaker:But it's all about stabilizing the ball and socket by swapping over the ball and socket.
Speaker:So unfortunately, I always warn patients. It was a French biomechanical engineer
Speaker:who came up with the name, and it freaks people out. I warned them,
Speaker:we're not going to go backwards.
Speaker:We're just going to swap the ball and sock it over.
Speaker:And that's why it's called reverse, anatomic versus reverse.
Speaker:And you can, so the Australian Orthopedic Joint Registry is very interesting.
Speaker:As you can see, there are 58,000, 78,000 knees, only 10,000 shoulders done in Australia.
Speaker:Of which the average shoulder surgeon, a general surgeon does five a year,
Speaker:where they do like 150 other joints.
Speaker:So I won't have time to discuss it, but that's why I think we've become dedicated shoulder surgeons.
Speaker:I gave up doing these 15 years ago, just two shoulders, because studies have
Speaker:shown that there are better results with your volume.
Speaker:So when we look at the joint registry, we
Speaker:have our reverses and anatomics the reverses are approaching 100% and the anatomics
Speaker:are approaching 0% and that's because the anatomics have a much much higher
Speaker:revision rate compared to a reverser which has got brilliant long term results
Speaker:so that's why the trend has gone.
Speaker:The anatomics have all these issues which I don't have time to talk about and
Speaker:this is an example of anatomic that we see all the time it fails,
Speaker:it subluxes We have to revise it to reverse, which lasts much longer.
Speaker:So the introduction of a reverse shoulder replacement is arguably the greatest
Speaker:advance in shoulder surgery in our working lives. We've come a long way.
Speaker:So now the greatest advance, one of the greatest advances anyway,
Speaker:is our preoperative planning. I use an analogy, it's like shoes.
Speaker:We've all got different size and
Speaker:shape. We've got to choose the right component to get the best results.
Speaker:So these days we do a CT and we plan everybody. We pre-plan,
Speaker:we put the implants, we decide what size and which shape will fit best.
Speaker:Okay, and this is just an example of severe deformity, which we can address
Speaker:now by pre-planning, choosing the right implants, we can correct deformity by
Speaker:just taking different components.
Speaker:So I'll skip through, but anyway, complication rates are grossly reduced by
Speaker:the better position fixation of the glenone components.
Speaker:And this is what we do for every single patient, which makes sure the shoulder
Speaker:replacement works properly. I've got to finish off.
Speaker:So the rehab's completely changed. Because we've got a more stable joint,
Speaker:we don't need to keep them in a sling anymore while they're awake.
Speaker:They can sit however they feel comfortable.
Speaker:They start their own physiotherapy and are much more comfortable because of that.
Speaker:The rehab I know I have time to talk about, but basically they start driving six weeks.
Speaker:They can drive at six weeks. They can start swimming at six weeks.
Speaker:They can start playing gentle golf.
Speaker:They can swim at 12 weeks properly. So at six weeks, they start golf by eight
Speaker:months. They're usually back playing competitive golf.
Speaker:Now, in terms of returning to function, they can, as I said,
Speaker:do general things at six weeks and get back to full activities by six months,
Speaker:returning to work and things like that.
Speaker:I'll skip through this. Crohn's stress fracture is a bit of an esoteric thing,
Speaker:but just my last comment on return to sport, which is another pet interest.
Speaker:We're doing research with medical students at Macquarie University Hospital,
Speaker:looking at return to sport.
Speaker:And as you can see, 66% of this study could get back to golf,
Speaker:only 50% of tennis players.
Speaker:In our study, we're currently doing with medical students. What we found was
Speaker:90% of the patients were very happy with their operation.
Speaker:66% were able to return to sport, of which 60 could, at the same or even a higher
Speaker:level than before the surgery, 70% at golf, gym 85, gardening 83,
Speaker:97 activities of daily living.
Speaker:So really the results of reverse replacement have radically changed how we manage arthritis.
Speaker:Thank you very much. I'm sorry. I've gone over a minimum of 50 seconds.