The Mail on Sunday

Physio ‘as good as surgery’ for frozen shoulder

- By Ethan Ennals

PHYSIOTHER­APY can be just as effective as invasive surgery for fixing one of t he most common shoulder injuries, British surgeons have found.

Frozen shoulder, or adhesive capsulitis, affects about one in ten Britons, mostly those over 40, and is twice as likely in those with type 2 diabetes.

The problem – which occurs when tissue around the shoulder joint gradually stiffens – can become resistant to painkiller­s, so sometimes an operation is needed to remove the hard, inflamed area to ease excruciati­ng pain and allow sufferers to regain the use of their arm.

But a new study involving 500 sufferers from 35 NHS Trusts has found that surgery may not be necessary for many of these patients.

A programme of physiother­apy, which involved exercises to gradually i ncrease fl exibility in t he area, reduced pain and increased function as much as the widely used surgical procedure.

The four-year study compared three different treatments – physiother­apy,

‘An operation is not always the best answer to this’

keyhole surgery and physiother­apy combined with steroid injections to reduce inflammati­on.

Participan­ts completed lengthy questionna­ires throughout the study, reporting their pain and mobility.

Professor Amar Rangan, orthopaedi­c surgeon and chief investigat­or of the study, said the findings showed, ‘expensive keyhole surgery is no better’ than exercise.

The surgical procedure most commonly used is known as arthroscop­ic capsular release, whereby stiff scar tissue around the joint is burned away using a hot probe.

But Prof Rangan says this procedure is ‘ invasive and expensive’ as well as riskier due to the possibilit­y of infections and complicati­ons with anesthesia. Patients who have this procedure will often need physiother­apy afterwards.

Prof Rangan and colleagues created an alternativ­e treatment especially for the trial – a physiother­apy and steroid combinatio­n.

But this proved no more effective than physiother­apy alone.

Prof Rang an says the results show that the keyhole procedure should be reserved for only a small number of the most severe cases of frozen shoulder.

He says: ‘ Keyhole is a resourcehe­avy procedure, taking up a lot of time and money.

‘ Our study shows it isn’t always necessaril­y the best answer – especially for people with diabetes or other health conditions who want to avoid surgery. Now they have other options.’

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