Adhesive Capsulitis (Frozen Shoulder)

Inflammation and fibrosis of the joint capsule leading to contracture of the shoulder joint

Aetiology

  • Age 40s-50s
  • Higher incidence in females
  • Aetiology unclear - sometimes history of a triggering injury but often there is not, may also occur after shoulder surgery
  • Association with diabetes, hypercholesterolaemia and endocrine disease and Dupuytren's disease

Pathophysiology

  1. Freezing or painful stage: minimal synovitis with pain, causing a limitation of motion
  1. Frozen or transitional stage: pain decerases but proliferative synovitis with contraction of the capsule and adhesion of the axillary recess increases
  1. Thawing stage: inflammation decreases, movement slowly improves

Clinical presentation

Symptoms

  • Gradual severe pain
    • Pain at night
    • Pain at rest
    • Anterior pain
  • Stiffness
  • Can be bilateral
  • Self-limiting course - pain subsides after around 2-9 months and stiffness will increase for around 4-12 months

Signs

  • Global restriction in ROM, especially in external rotation (<50% of normal)

Investigations

  • Clinical diagnosis
  • Imaging (x-ray, USS, MRI) may be used to rule out other causes of stiffness and pain

Management

Prognosis

  • Self limiting - resolves after 18-24 months
  • Pain will subside and stiffness increases, before stiffness gradually 'thaws' out
  • Nearly all patients have some residual stiffness and 15% have residual pain

Conservative

  • Physio and analgesia
  • Intra-articular (glenohumeral) steriod injections can help in the painful phase
  • Fluroscopic distension

Surgical

  • Once the pain has settled, if the patient cannot tolerate functional loss due to stiffness, recovery can be hastened by manipulation under anaesthetic (MUA which tears the capsule) or surgical capsular release (usually done arthroscopically) which divides the capsule leading to improved motion
  • After capsular release, patient will have a short period in a sling before aggressive physiotherapy