The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Creaky shoulder? Try a reverse ball and socket joint!

- By Roger Dobson

PEOPLE battling debilitati­ng arthritis in the shoulder are finding relief thanks to a revolution­ary ‘backward’ ball and socket joint replacemen­t.

Traditiona­l shoulder replacemen­ts use a ball-shaped implant at the top of the arm bone, nestling into a cup-shaped socket in the shoulder – just like the normal anatomy.

Many arthritis patients also have damaged shoulder muscles that cannot hold the new joint in place securely. But now surgeons have found a way round this by creating an implant that’s the opposite of a normal shoulder – with a socketshap­ed implant attached to the top of the arm bone and a ball screwed into the shoulder.

This requires fewer intact muscles to hold it in place.

At least 21 NHS patients have so far had the implant, which significan­tly reduces pain in about 90 per cent of cases.

Mr Joby George Malal, a consultant orthopaedi­c surgeon pioneering the procedure at Bedford Hospital, said: ‘By reversing the configurat­ion of the shoulder joint, we change the way it works – so it relies on different muscles to move.’

Teacher Sue Phillips, from Potton, Bedfordshi­re, had not slept properly for more than two years because of the pain of an arthritic shoulder.

Following the operation, Sue, 60, not only sleeps through the night, but is back playing hockey. She says: ‘I am no longer in pain and have much more movement than before. It was a great success.’

The shoulder joint has three main bones, the collarbone (clavicle), shoulder blade (scapula) and the upper arm bone (humerus).

At the upper end of the humerus is a ball, called the humeral head, which rests against a socket in the shoulder. But this socket is shallow to allow proper movement, as the shoulder has the greatest range of movement of any joint in the body.

This means the job of keeping the ball securely in the socket falls on a group of muscles and tendons called the rotator cuff.

When the shoulder develops osteoarthr­itis – the gradual breakdown of cartilage that allows smooth movement – this causes friction that leads to severe pain, loss of movement and joint stiffness.

An added problem is the rotator cuff tissue frequently tears with increasing age and usage, something that affects up to half of all adults aged 60 and over.

The backward joint replacemen­t, carried out under general anaestheti­c, takes two to three hours.

Surgeons remove the decaying joint through an incision in the front of the shoulder and anchor the socket implant into the top of the humerus – the arm bone.

A long, porous ‘tail’ on the implant feeds into the hollow centre of the humerus so that bone cells grow into it, securing the implant.

The metal ball implant is then anchored to the shoulder blade with screws. The socket it sits in is lined with smooth plastic, which allows for frictionle­ss movement.

Patients are usually back at home later the same day.

‘They keep their arm in a sling for two to three weeks and do gentle exercises that don’t involve moving the shoulder,’ says Mr George Malal. ‘Then we give them a physiother­apy programme and most can do normal things like drive or household chores within six weeks to three months.’

He says some movements are sacrificed – like reaching backwards – but most patients can easily get something off a high shelf.

Sue, who lives with design engineer husband Nigel, 61, says the operation ended a five-year battle with pain and immobility.

She says: ‘I have always played sports, including tennis, and teach physical education, but about five years ago I started getting problems with my right shoulder. I couldn’t lift my arm and it was very painful. I saw my GP and had steroid injections and took ibuprofen, but in the two years before the operation I had not slept properly because of the pain.

‘I had a CT scan and MRI last year and the damage was extensive. The rotator cuff was also damaged, probably as a result of years of playing sports like tennis – I am right handed.’

Sue had surgery in May 2019 and says: ‘My arm was in a sling afterwards – it wasn’t particular­ly painful, and I just took ibuprofen. Now I can do almost everything and there’s no pain.

‘The only thing I can’t manage is reaching directly up. But I can play hockey again, which is great. Just no more tennis.’

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