Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The long biceps tendon (LBT) has a particular anatomical pathway, making it fragile due to repeated microtrauma or trauma which can lead to chronic lesions of LBT. Current issue with this pathology is the absence of preoperative effective clinical and paraclinical tools, allowing confirmed diagnosis, in particular because of its entanglement with other pathologies. This diagnostic uncertainty generates an approximation for LBT therapeutic indications so that therapeutic indications are frequently finalized during glenohumeral arthroscopy. Having a reliable and reproducible diagnostic tool for LBT pathologies would allow an improvement in their surgical load management . In this context, this research is based on the hypothesis that the construction of a pre-operative score, the HASS score, combining pre-operative clinical and paraclinical data would allow to obtain a reliable diagnosis of LBT injuries.


Clinical Trial Description

The long biceps tendon (LBT) has a particular anatomical pathway, making it fragile due to repeated microtrauma or trauma which can lead to chronic lesions of LBT. Aging can also worsen damage to this tendon. LBT lesions are frequently associated with other pathologies of glenohumeral complex, particularly damage to the rotators' cuff or subacromial impingements. Current issue with this pathology is the absence of preoperative effective clinical and paraclinical tools, allowing confirmed diagnosis, in particular because of its entanglement with other pathologies. Isolated clinical tests are numerous and ineffective. Ultrasound is a reliable examination for taking LBT volumetric measurements or to diagnose instability but it fails in the diagnosis of cracks and tendinopathy. CT scan, CT arthrography, MRI and MRI arthrography, except a few characteristic signs of LBT lesions, ignore most of lesions and their analysis is difficult and little reproducible. This diagnostic uncertainty generates an approximation for LBT therapeutic indications so that therapeutic indications are frequently finalized during glenohumeral arthroscopy. However, more distal lesions, in or under the bicipital groove, not accessible in arthroscopy, are described in the literature. Having a reliable and reproducible diagnostic tool for LBT pathologies would allow an improvement in their surgical load management . It would then be possible not to ignore a lesion which is not visible on arthroscopy or conversely not to perform excess gestures on healthy LBT. It would allow also to provide clear preoperative information to patient on planned surgical procedures and their consequences. In this context, this research is based on the hypothesis that the construction of a pre-operative score, the HASS score, combining pre-operative clinical and paraclinical data would allow to obtain a reliable diagnosis of LBT injuries. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06446336
Study type Observational
Source GCS Ramsay Santé pour l'Enseignement et la Recherche
Contact Olivier COURAGE, MD
Phone + 33 2 76 89 97 93
Email o.courage@wanadoo.fr
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date May 1, 2024
Completion date April 30, 2026

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Withdrawn NCT04073212 - Dry Needling and Exercise Versus Traditional Physical Therapy for Biceps Tendinitis N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05519228 - PMCF Study on the Safety, Performance and Clinical Benefits Data of the ToggleLoc™ 2.9mm in the Elbow
Terminated NCT03529162 - A Prospective Study Comparing Suture Anchor and Soft Tissue Pectoralis Major Tendon Techniques for Biceps Tenodesis N/A
Recruiting NCT05370183 - Tenotomy of Biceps' Long Head by Mini-optics in Consultation (Hyperambulatory): What Advantage Compared to the Operating Room? N/A
Completed NCT04650477 - Forearm Position in Subpectoral Biceps Tenodesis N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT05584553 - PMCF Study on the Safety, Performance and Clinical Benefits Data of the ToggleLoc™ 2.9mm and JuggerLoc™ in the Shoulder