A Novel Classification in Calcific Tendinitis of the Shoulder: Evaluating MRI Localization and Related Treatment Strategies
Koç University
400 participants
Oct 2, 2025
OBSERVATIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Calcific tendinitis of the shoulder is among the frequently encountered shoulder problems. Conservative treatment is often preferred for its management. Persistent pain, impingement symptoms due to large calcific deposits, and extension into the bone are indications for surgical intervention. Although many classification methods for calcific tendinitis have been defined in the literature, none of them is directly related to prognosis, treatment options, or surgical management. The aim of this study is to create a new, easy-to-apply, practical, and treatment-related classification system for calcific tendinitis based on the localization of the deposits on MRI. Furthermore, the aim is to compile the current patient cohort according to this new classification and examine the relationship between the treatment applied and the deposit localization in the proposed classification.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria2
- Patients who underwent surgical treatment for calcific tendinitis
- Presence of single or multiple calcific deposits within the rotator cuff tendons
Exclusion Criteria3
- History of prior ipsilateral shoulder surgery for indications other than calcific tendinitis
- Revision surgery for calcific tendinitis
- Incomplete clinical documentation or unavailable MRI data
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Interventions
Non surgical conservative treatment consist of all the treatment modalities e.g. analgesic treatment (NSAIDs, paracetamol...), ice packaging, movement restriction, resting etc.
Debridement intervention can be described as a surgical intervention, which includes debridement of the calcification deposit.
After the surgical debridement of the deposit, sometimes there is a rotator cuff defect. Side to side repair group consist of the cases when the defect is repaired side to side primarily.
Anchor fixation group consist of the cases when the rotator cuff defect cannot be repaired side to side, and the surgeon managed the defect by fixating it to the bone with an anchor.
Locations(1)
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NCT07409818