Volume 17, Issue 6 , Pages 881-885, November 2008
Full-thickness rotator cuff tear prevalence and correlation with function and co-morbidities in patients sixty-five years and older
The purpose of this study was to determine full-thickness rotator cuff tear prevalence in patients 65 and older and to correlate tears with comfort, function, and co-morbidities. Two-hundred shoulders without prior surgery were evaluated with a Simple Shoulder Test, a Constant Score, and ultrasound. Full thickness tear prevalence was 22%. Adjusting for age and gender, those with tears had lower scores than those without (P < .001 for each). Adjusting for many potential confounders, with a 10-year age increase, the odds of a tear increased 2.69-fold (P = .005). For those with tears, scores were no different for those who had seen a physician for their shoulder compared to those who had not. Full-thickness cuff tear prevalence was 22% in those 65 and older. Tear prevalence increased with increasing age. Shoulder scores were poorer for those with tears.
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This work was supported by the American Geriatric Society's Dennis W. Jahnigen 2004 Young Investigator's Career Development Award.
PII: S1058-2746(08)00437-0
doi:10.1016/j.jse.2008.05.039
© 2008 Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery Board of Trustees. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 17, Issue 6 , Pages 881-885, November 2008
