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Operative Versus Non-operative Management of Subacromial Impingement
Sponsor: Central Finland Hospital District
Summary
The study aims at determining the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of surgical management of subacromial impingement (including partial tears) compared to conservative treatment. The research setting is prospective, randomised, and controlled. The aim of the study is to search out evidence based data of indications for subacromial decompression. The investigators also aim at offering patients the most efficient and effective treatment and reduce the number of operations that do not have sufficient effectiveness. The data obtained will facilitate developing guidelines for referrals to a specialist when subacromial impingement is suspected. The investigators hypothesise that there are subgroups of patients suffering from subacromial impingement that benefit from surgery whereas other subgroups are best treated conservatively.
Official title: The Effectiveness and Cost-effectiveness of Operative Versus Non-operative Management of Subacromial Impingement
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
35 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
100
Start Date
2008-06
Completion Date
2027-01
Last Updated
2024-02-13
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Acromioplasty
Arthroscopic or open acromioplasty
Physiotherapy
Physiotherapy according to a standardized protocol
Locations (3)
University of Helsinki
Helsinki, Finland
Central Finland Health District
Jyväskylä, Finland
Oulu University Hospital
Oulu, Finland