Daily News (Los Angeles)

Surgical repair of torn rotator cuff usually restores function

- Columnist By Russell Myers Contact Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@med. cornell.edu.

I had an MRI that showed three of my four rotator cuff tendons have complete tears. I can only lift my right arm midway. I cannot comb my hair, and I'm right-handed. I cannot lift a glass or coffee cup to put on a shelf in kitchen cabinets. I have some pain if I move my arm too much, but Advil helps. Can you tell me what to expect after surgical repair?

— V.K.

The rotator cuff is a group of four muscles (subscapula­ris, supraspina­tus, infraspina­tus and teres minor) that attach the arm to the torso. The bony joint does not really do that the way the hip does, for example. Any movement of the arm or shoulder needs to be balanced by the rotator cuff for the shoulder to work properly.

Shoulder cuff issues are the most common cause of shoulder pain. But the most common rotator cuff problem is not a tear, but damage to the tendons without a complete tear. This is usually treated by physical therapy and sometimes joint injection.

An acute, full-thickness tear in a person with an otherwise normal shoulder is usually treated with immediate surgery to prevent muscle atrophy and further joint degenerati­on. Fullthickn­ess tears in a person with existing rotator cuff disease and who have new limitation­s in shoulder movement are also usually treated surgically.

The goal of surgery is to restore as much function to the shoulder as possible and my experience with my own patients who undergo shoulder surgery is that most function can be restored. However, it can be a long road to get there, with physical and sometimes occupation­al therapy after surgery.

Some older patients with full-thickness tears nonetheles­s have pretty good function of the shoulder. Conservati­ve therapy (with the very same experts in physical and occupation­al therapies) can be effective. Surgery should be considered only in those who don't respond to therapy and medication.

A friend of my 31-year-old daughter has just been diagnosed with visual snow syndrome. He is devastated, since his profession depends heavily on being able to see clearly. I understand that the disease is not physiologi­cal, but rather neurologic­al. Is this disease incurable? Is there a genetic link? Do you know of any studies underway?

— C.S.

Visual snow is a rare disorder where people notice snowlike dots throughout the visual field. It can sometimes begin in childhood, and apparently there are adults who can never recall having vision without those kinds of dots, which can cause significan­t loss of visual acuity (and psychologi­cal consequenc­es, as you might well imagine).

A 2017 review of the condition identified this as related to, but distinct from, migraine with aura. They proposed two treatments: one medicine normally used for seizures, lamotrigin­e, and another used for migraine (among other conditions), verapamil. The authors noted that this does not cure the disease, but can improve vision.

A second review from 2020 suggested medication therapy is unfortunat­ely not effective much of the time, and suggested the wearing of colored glasses (blue-yellow) as being helpful.

I did find a trial in Colorado recruiting patients for transcrani­al magnetic stimulatio­n for this condition. You can find it at clinicaltr­ials.gov.

ACROSS

1 Cruel smile

6 Makes a pick 10 Folk singer Guthrie “Parallel Mothers” director Almodovar ___ talk (honest conversati­on) Stink

Elite crew Tracy Chapman, vocally

Bike selection

AOL rival 23andMe competitor Persnicket­y “The Little Mermaid” collectibl­e Go by, as time Four-sided dice, e.g. (Note the last 3 letters of this answer + the start of 34-Down) Go by, as time

“Jane ___” Shofar horn source “Semper Fidelis” composer Prop for a ball

Haim of “Licorice Pizza”

Fish kissed in Newfoundla­nd Conceited Farmers market sights

14

15

16 17 18

19

20 21

24 25

26

29

35

37 38

39

40

41

43

44 46

47

Advice lead-in

Acts loveydovey

Reddit Q&A Work space “... but no less” (Last 4 letters + the end of 53-Down) Woman in Progressiv­e ads

Word before “a blank” or “the line” Steamy resorts

One may be forwarded Vibe

Grin’s “ends” Smoothed, as a sand trap Gym shorts material

70 ___ mater

71 Has to have DOWN

1 Inbox annoyance Clears after taxes

Starter home?

Part of BCE Like Mercury or Venus (First 4 letters + the start of 21-Across) Prophet One-named soccer legend Pieces of body art, for short

Toy racer It has many diamonds Saxophone accessory

50

51 52 54

59

62

63

64

66 67 68

69

2

3

4 5 6 7

8

9 10

11

12

13

22

23

24

26 27 28 30 31

32

33

34 36 40

Like low-fat meat

Its pods go into gumbo Comedian Bargatze Microwave, as leftovers Egyptian snakes “Home Alone” costar Joe (Last 3 letters + the start of 47-Across) Standoffis­h ___ Arabia Itty-bitty Bread that might be marbled Cleaning product that anagrams to 33-Down Total stranger, informally Build up “Help!”

Black ___ (dress code) 42 45

46

48

49 53 54

55

56

57

58 59

60

61

65

Deficiency Shrunken Asian lake Takes legal action

“Sad trombone” sound

Texan city supposedly named after a Ukrainian city

Not lenient Spare rib supplier? 50-50 test guess

Does some paving Australian gem

Toasty

Like fair-weather friends Twisted the truth 12-year-___ (some tweens) Hollywood legend West

Answers to yesterday's puzzle

 ?? © 2022 Andrews McMeel Universal
www.upuzzles.com
by Kevin Shustack ??
© 2022 Andrews McMeel Universal www.upuzzles.com by Kevin Shustack
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States