The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Vol 73, Issue 7 961-968, Copyright © 1991 by Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc
Total acromionectomy. A twenty-year review
RC Bosley
Boulder Orthopedics, Colorado 80304.
Thirty-five patients (thirty-eight shoulders) were treated consecutively
with a total acromionectomy between 1969 and 1989. At a minimum of two
years (average, five years and eight months) after the operation,
thirty-one patients (thirty-four shoulders) were available for review. The
results, which were rated on the basis of pain, function, range of motion,
strength, and the satisfaction of the patient, were excellent for
twenty-five shoulders, good for four, fair for three, and poor for one.
Four of the five least satisfactory results were in patients who had had a
long-standing massive tear of the rotator cuff. This study was done to
separate the criticism of the operative procedure of total acromionectomy
from an avoidable complication of that procedure, retraction of the
deltoid, and to describe the specific advantages and satisfactory results
that occur when that complication is avoided. It is my opinion that failure
to repair the deltoid adequately results in retraction of that muscle, and
that this avoidable complication is responsible for the unfavorable
reputation of total acromionectomy.