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Case Manager's Corner
Contemporary Sports Medicine
Acromioclavicular Joint Arthritis
| Mechanism of Injury: |
Blunt trauma to the acromioclavicular (AC) joint
may result in post-traumatic arthritis. Alternatively, repetitive
overhead activities such as those associated with impingement
syndrome may lead to degenerative changes within the AC joint.
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| Subjective Symptoms: |
Dorsal shoulder pain often made worse with bringing
the arm across the chest and with overhead activities. |
| Objective Signs: |
AC joint tenderness to direct palpation, elicitation
of pain with cross-arm adduction, elimination of pain with injection
of local anesthetic into the AC joint, confirmation of joint space
narrowing with radiographs or increased uptake with a bone scan.
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| Natural History: |
In most instances, once the pain is initiated,
it will persist or increase especially if the inciting event is
not eliminated. |
Treatment
| Nonsurgical: |
NSAIDs, cortisone injection into the AC joint,
limited physical therapy. |
| Surgical: |
Arthroscopic (or open) distal clavicle excision
(i.e., Mumford procedure). |
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Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI) |
Work Status until MMI |
| Nonsurgical: |
8-12 weeks* |
Limit lifting, repetitive machinery, overhead
activities |
| Surgical: |
12-16 weeks |
Limit lifting, repetitive machinery, overhead
activities |
Copyright 2001-2010 © MyShoulderElbow.org, All Rights Reserved
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Brian J. Cole, MD, MBA
Professor, Department
of Orthopaedics and
Anatomy and Cell Biology
Division of Sports Medicine
Section Head, Cartilage Restoration Center at Rush
Rush University Medical Center
Office: 312-243-4244
Fax: 312-942-1517
E-mail:bcole@rushortho.com
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