Purpose
To evaluate the critical shoulder angle (CSA), acromion index (AI) and further acromion parameters in patients with isolated SLAP lesions compared with patients without SLAP lesions.
Methods
Between 2012 and 2016, the CSA, AI, lateral acromion angle (LAA) and acromion slope (AS) were radiologically examined in consecutive patients > 18 years having had a shoulder arthroscopy with isolated SLAP lesion types II–IV. These were compared to controls without SLAP lesions and without (control group I) or with (control group II) complete supraspinatus tendon (SSP) tears.
Results
75/103 patients with isolated SLAP lesion types II–IV with a mean age of 46.5 years (± 13.0, 18.1–76.3) were analyzed, 61% of them being male. For control, n = 211 consecutive patients (47% male) with an intact SSP and SLAP complex and a mean age of 52.3 years (± 15.0, 18.6–88.4) and n = 115 patients (60% male) with an intact SLAP complex but complete SSP tears, mean age 66.6 years (± 9.3, 44.7–87.9) were examined. The CSA in SLAP patients was 29.6° (± 3.5, 21.0–38.0), 33.8° (± 3.7, 25.1–46.9) in no SLAP and no SSP (p < 0.001) and 36.7° (± 3.6, 29.1–46.6) in no SLAP but SSP (p < 0.001). The area under the curve (AUC) for CSA was 0.83 for SLAP lesions resulting in a probability of 83% for patients with SLAP lesion to be associated with a specific CSA.
Conclusions
Isolated SLAP lesion types II–IV are associated with a low CSA < 30°. The AI, the AS as well as the LAA showed no correlation with SLAP lesions.
Level of evidence
Retrospective comparative study, Level III.