Reports of young patients with arthritis in shoulder increasing
February 17th, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey
A growing number of young patients have been developing arthritis in their shoulders after routine outpatient arthroscopic surgery, causing surgeons to question what could be causing the debilitating condition in otherwise healthy individuals.
Arthritis in the shoulder is somewhat uncommon, with about 40,000 shoulder replacements being performed each year in the United States. By comparison, 450,000 knee and 230,000 hip replacements are performed annually. But the increasing reports of shoulder arthritis in young patients is alarming on many levels.
For starters, current shoulder replacement techniques do not adequately address the high function demands of young active patients. And while shoulder replacement may help relieve pain, many of these young patients who have shoulder replacement surgery will require further shoulder reconstructive surgery in the future.
The arthritic condition many of these young people suffer with is known as chondrolysis, a condition in which the cartilage in the shoulder joint wears away causing bone to rub against bone. There is no cure, and those who have chondrolysis often suffer from pain, limited mobility and debilitation. In many cases patients require shoulder replacement surgery.
As more and more reports of chondrolysis were being reported in patients following shoulder surgery, surgeons and researchers began to ask why. Laboratory data and clinical reports began pointing to the same likely culprit – the prolonged use of intra-articular local anesthetics administered directly into the shoulder joint by a pain pump device. Investigations found that this was not an FDA-approved use for the pain pump or the anesthetic; however, that didn’t stop pain pump manufacturers from instructing surgeons to use the device in such a way.
Surgeons are now understanding how they have been misled by the makers of pain pumps and with luck, the number of new chondrolysis reports will decrease in time. Until then, the only recourse victims have is to go after the pain pump manufacturers in court.
Source: Gerson Lehrman Group

