Bone grafting in primary and revision reverse total shoulder arthroplasty for the management of glenoid bone loss: A systematic review
Autore
Malahias M.-A., Chytas D., Kostretzis L., Brilakis E., Fandridis E., Hantes M., Antonogiannakis E.Data
2020Language
en
Soggetto
Abstract
Purpose: We performed a systematic review of the studies including clinical/functional outcomes and complications of bone grafting for glenoid defects in reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (RTSA). Methods: The PubMed and Cochrane databases were searched for relevant papers. Results: Thirteen articles were included. The mean clinical/functional subjective scores significantly improved postoperatively. The implant revision rate for primary and revision RTSA was 3.1% and 21.1% respectively. The reoperation rate was 3.5% and 24.4% respectively. Conclusions: There was moderate evidence that bone grafting is effective for glenoid defects in primary RTSA. Further high-quality research is required about revision RTSA for moderate-to-severe glenoid defects. © 2019 Professor P K Surendran Memorial Education Foundation