shoulder acap Flashcards

1
Q

what is the prevalence for Acap

A

2-3% of general population

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2
Q

what are the risk factors for Acap

A
  • systemic illness such as DM or thyroid disease
  • age 40-65
  • females more than males
  • history of frozen shoulder
  • dupuytren’s contractures are related to thyroid, DM and cap
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3
Q

what is the typical time course for Acap

A

-12-18 months, but can last up to 4 years

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4
Q

what red flag conditions could refer pain to the shoulder

A
  1. digestive disease
  2. Upper arm fractures
  3. vascular injuries
  4. neoplasm
  5. Osteoporosis
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5
Q

what clinical findings would you expect with Acap

A
  1. age between 40-65
  2. gradual onset and progressive worsening
  3. pain and stiffness that limits function
  4. GH PROM is limited in multiple directions
  5. ER most limited particularly in abduction
  6. IR and ER decrease with greater degrees of abduction
  7. PROM produces primary pain
  8. GH joint mobility limitations
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6
Q

why is Acap PROM decreased into abduction

A

takes slack out of the capsule

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7
Q

what are the Acap stages

A

stage 1: early and looks like an impingement problem
stage 2: painful freezing
stage 3: frozen
stage 4: thawing
** level of irritation is also classified **

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8
Q

describe stage 1

A
  • up to three months long
  • sharp end range pain
  • achy pain at rest
  • sleep disturbances
  • early loss of ER with intact RTC strength
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9
Q

Describe the patho-anatomy of stage 1

A

synovial reaction no adhesions or contractures

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10
Q

describe the stages of irritability

A

HIGH
- high pain levels, consistent pain at night or rest, high self reported disability, pain before end range, AROM significantly less than PROM
MODERATE
- moderate pain levels, intermittent night or rest pain, moderate self reported disability, pain at end ranges of active and passive, AROM=PROM
LOW
- minimal pain (4or less), no night or rest pain, pain with overpressure PROM, AROM=PROM

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