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Profiling Patients With Rotator Cuff Related Shoulder Pain: What Factors Influence Outcome

Shoulder pain from rotator cuff disorders is common, affecting function and quality of life. Many patients in orthopaedic clinics are diagnosed with these conditions. Most do not need surgery and are treated with pain relief and physiotherapy. However, long physiotherapy waitlists cause delays, and some patients do not

Condition(s)Rotator Cuff Related Shoulder Pain, RCRSP
StatusRecruiting
Study typeObservational
SummaryShoulder pain from rotator cuff disorders is common, affecting function and quality of life. Many patients in orthopaedic clinics are diagnosed with these conditions. Most do not need surgery and are treated with pain relief and physiotherapy. However, long physiotherapy waitlists cause delays, and some patients do not achieve good outcomes. There is limited evidence to predict who will recover well with non-surgical care. A cohort study at Croom Orthopaedic Hospital is proposed to explore this. Patients assessed as suitable for non-surgical care by the shoulder physiotherapist will provide consent and complete questionnaires on pain, disability, quality of life, and personal factors like age and gender. They will continue with prescribed care and repeat the questionnaires after six months
Who can participateInclusion Criteria: * Adults * Clinically diagnosed Rotator Cuff Related Shoulder Pain (disorder of the rotator cuff muscles and/or sub acromial space). * Being referred to primary care physiotherapy or other non-surgical management. Exclusion Criteria: * Under 18 * Non-rotator cuff related pathologies of the shoulder such as fractures, frozen shoulder, concomitant neck pain. * Person undergoing shoulder surgery. * Neither the patient nor carer can communicate in English sufficiently to complete consent or baseline assessment.
Ages18 Years
SexAll
Lead sponsorUniversity of Limerick
LocationsLimerick, Ireland
Start date2026-01-05
NCT IDNCT07360847
Official listinghttps://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT07360847

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