Development of supraspinatus imaging guidance for primary care physicians with a focus on patient selection

Abstract Background Primary care physicians frequently encounter patients with supraspinatus pathology and face a difficult task of managing this subset of patients using limited imaging resources. The purpose of this study was to develop a guidance that could help primary care physicians choose app...

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Main Authors: Anurag Dalai, Leanne Langford, Cole Beavis, Haron Obaid
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-09-01
Series:The Ultrasound Journal
Subjects:
MRI
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13089-020-00187-2
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spelling doaj-f4d364c84df845f69fa2b5f6e46ad4072020-11-25T02:53:11ZengSpringerOpenThe Ultrasound Journal2524-89872020-09-011211610.1186/s13089-020-00187-2Development of supraspinatus imaging guidance for primary care physicians with a focus on patient selectionAnurag Dalai0Leanne Langford1Cole Beavis2Haron Obaid3Department of Radiology, College of Medicine, University of SaskatchewanDepartment of Radiology, College of Medicine, University of SaskatchewanDepartment of Orthopedic Surgery, College of Medicine, University of SaskatchewanDepartment of Radiology, College of Medicine, University of SaskatchewanAbstract Background Primary care physicians frequently encounter patients with supraspinatus pathology and face a difficult task of managing this subset of patients using limited imaging resources. The purpose of this study was to develop a guidance that could help primary care physicians choose appropriate imaging tests judiciously for patients with suspected supraspinatus pathology. Methods The imaging reports of one hundred patients who underwent ultrasound and MRI for suspected supraspinatus tendinopathy were retrospectively assessed. The supraspinatus tendon was recorded as intact, partial tear (articular or bursal), or full-thickness tear (focal or complete width). The agreement between imaging modalities was then evaluated using factors such as pathology type and age. Results There was agreement between modalities in 48/100 patients (Kappa statistic = 0.30). The consistency varied with type of pathology: intact tendons by ultrasound had 55.8% agreement with MRI, partial sided bursal tears 50%, partial sided articular tears 25%, and full-thickness focal tears 33.3%. Full-thickness complete-width tears had a much better agreement with MRI at 90.9%. Age was also significant, with increased disagreement between ultrasound and MRI in patients over 50 years old. Conclusions Our data showed that ultrasound findings correlated well with MRI in patients under 50 years of age and also in patients with full-thickness supraspinatus tears. We recommend that primary care physicians may consider using ultrasound as the initial test in younger patients and in patients with suspected full supraspinatus tears, based on clinical exam, with MRI as an option for further evaluation to quantify supraspinatus muscle atrophy. These patient selection recommendations will help promote mindful utilization of scarce resources.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13089-020-00187-2Rotator cuff tendinopathySupraspinatus tendinopathyMRIUltrasoundMusculoskeletal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anurag Dalai
Leanne Langford
Cole Beavis
Haron Obaid
spellingShingle Anurag Dalai
Leanne Langford
Cole Beavis
Haron Obaid
Development of supraspinatus imaging guidance for primary care physicians with a focus on patient selection
The Ultrasound Journal
Rotator cuff tendinopathy
Supraspinatus tendinopathy
MRI
Ultrasound
Musculoskeletal
author_facet Anurag Dalai
Leanne Langford
Cole Beavis
Haron Obaid
author_sort Anurag Dalai
title Development of supraspinatus imaging guidance for primary care physicians with a focus on patient selection
title_short Development of supraspinatus imaging guidance for primary care physicians with a focus on patient selection
title_full Development of supraspinatus imaging guidance for primary care physicians with a focus on patient selection
title_fullStr Development of supraspinatus imaging guidance for primary care physicians with a focus on patient selection
title_full_unstemmed Development of supraspinatus imaging guidance for primary care physicians with a focus on patient selection
title_sort development of supraspinatus imaging guidance for primary care physicians with a focus on patient selection
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Ultrasound Journal
issn 2524-8987
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Abstract Background Primary care physicians frequently encounter patients with supraspinatus pathology and face a difficult task of managing this subset of patients using limited imaging resources. The purpose of this study was to develop a guidance that could help primary care physicians choose appropriate imaging tests judiciously for patients with suspected supraspinatus pathology. Methods The imaging reports of one hundred patients who underwent ultrasound and MRI for suspected supraspinatus tendinopathy were retrospectively assessed. The supraspinatus tendon was recorded as intact, partial tear (articular or bursal), or full-thickness tear (focal or complete width). The agreement between imaging modalities was then evaluated using factors such as pathology type and age. Results There was agreement between modalities in 48/100 patients (Kappa statistic = 0.30). The consistency varied with type of pathology: intact tendons by ultrasound had 55.8% agreement with MRI, partial sided bursal tears 50%, partial sided articular tears 25%, and full-thickness focal tears 33.3%. Full-thickness complete-width tears had a much better agreement with MRI at 90.9%. Age was also significant, with increased disagreement between ultrasound and MRI in patients over 50 years old. Conclusions Our data showed that ultrasound findings correlated well with MRI in patients under 50 years of age and also in patients with full-thickness supraspinatus tears. We recommend that primary care physicians may consider using ultrasound as the initial test in younger patients and in patients with suspected full supraspinatus tears, based on clinical exam, with MRI as an option for further evaluation to quantify supraspinatus muscle atrophy. These patient selection recommendations will help promote mindful utilization of scarce resources.
topic Rotator cuff tendinopathy
Supraspinatus tendinopathy
MRI
Ultrasound
Musculoskeletal
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13089-020-00187-2
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