Continuous Shoulder Activity Tracking after Open Reduction and Internal Fixation of Proximal Humerus Fractures

Author:

Herteleer MichielORCID,Runer Armin,Remppis Magdalena,Brouwers Jonas,Schneider FriedemannORCID,Panagiotopoulou Vasiliki C.ORCID,Grimm Bernd,Hengg Clemens,Arora Rohit,Nijs Stefaan,Varga PeterORCID

Abstract

Postoperative shoulder activity after proximal humerus fracture treatment could influence the outcomes of osteosynthesis and may depend on the rehabilitation protocol. This multi-centric prospective study aimed at evaluating the feasibility of continuous shoulder activity monitoring over the first six postoperative weeks, investigating potential differences between two different rehabilitation protocols. Shoulder activity was assessed with pairs of accelerometer-based trackers during the first six postoperative weeks in thirteen elderly patients having a complex proximal humerus fracture treated with a locking plate. Shoulder angles and elevation events were evaluated over time and compared between the two centers utilizing different standard rehabilitation protocols. The overall mean shoulder angle ranged from 11° to 23°, and the number of daily elevation events was between 547 and 5756. Average angles showed longitudinal change <5° over 31 ± 10 days. The number of events increased by 300% on average. Results of the two clinics exhibited no characteristic differences for shoulder angle, but the number of events increased only for the site utilizing immediate mobilization. In addition to considerable inter-patient variation, not the mean shoulder angle but the number of elevations events increased markedly over time. Differences between the two sites in number of daily events may be associated with the different rehabilitation protocols.

Funder

AO Foundation via the AOTRAUMA Network

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Bioengineering

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Digitalization in orthopaedics: a narrative review;Frontiers in Surgery;2024-01-11

2. Advances in Biomechanics-Based Motion Analysis;Bioengineering;2023-06-02

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