J Korean Shoulder Elbow Soc.  2007 Dec;10(2):175-182.

Comparison of Superior Labral Anterior Posterior (SLAP) Lesions: Sports versus Non-sports Induced Injury

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Eulji University College of Medicine, Daejeon, Korea. kwangwon@eulji.ac.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE: This study compared the SLAP lesions caused by a sports-induced injury with those caused by a nonsports-induced injury.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The study was performed on 54 patients who had undergone arthroscopic surgery for a SLAP lesion. There were 21 sports-induced-injury patients (group I) and 36 non-sports-induced injury patients (group II). The mean age of the men was 36 years and that of the women was 48 years. In both groups, the frequency of a concomitant injury and the clinical outcomes at the last follow-up was evaluated using the UCLA score, Rowe score, and the ASES score.
RESULTS
According to their injury mechanism, , there were 14 cases (67%) of repeated microtrauma injury in group I and 25 cases (75%) of compression injury type in group II. As a concomitant pathology, there was 11 cases of shoulder instability and 5 cases of a rotator cuff tear in group I, and 23 cases of rotator cuff tears and 14 cases of shoulder instability in group II. At the last follow up, group I showed slightly better clinical satisfaction (P>0.05).
CONCLUSION
The possibility of a SLAP lesion accompanying other diseases is high. Therefore, an accurate assessment of concomitant injury lesions before surgery is important for the treatment outcome.

Keyword

SLAP (Superior labral anterior posterior) lesion; Sports-induced injury; Non-sports-induced injury; Concomitant injury

MeSH Terms

Arthroscopy
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Male
Pathology
Rotator Cuff
Shoulder
Sports*
Treatment Outcome
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