Abstract
Objectives
This study aimed to identify very early incidence of hemiplegic shoulder pain within 72 hours (HSP), how clinical assessment was related to pain at 8–10 week follow-up and explore current standard therapy/management.
Design
Observational, prospective.
Setting
Teaching hospital hyper-acute and follow-up stroke services.
Participants
121 consecutive patients with confirmed cerebral infarct/haemorrhage recruited within 72 hours of stroke onset.
Interventions
N/A.
Main outcome measures
Subjective report of pain severity and aggravating factors: using numerical rating scales and pain questionnaire (ShoulderQ), shoulder abductor and flexor muscle strength (Oxford MRC Scale), Neer’s Test of sub-acromial pain, shoulder subluxation and soft tissue shoulder palpation.
Results
At initial assessment (<72 hours), 35% (42/121) reported HSP. At follow-up (8–10 weeks), 44% (53/121) had pain: pain persisted in 32 of the original 42, resolved in 10 and had developed since initial assessment in 21. Pain at follow-up was associated with a statistically significant higher frequency of severe shoulder muscle weakness (MRC grade ≤2) and gleno-humeral subluxation at initial assessment. Soft tissue palpation and Neer’s Test detected pain but did not predict development of HSP. 50/121 patients had 140 therapy interventions, particularly targeted to those with a higher HSP risk.
Conclusion
This study reports HSP at an earlier time point after stroke than previous publications. Patients with severe arm weakness and/or shoulder subluxation within 72 hours are at significantly higher risk of HSP at 8–10 weeks. These data highlight the high incidence of HSP, the non-standardized therapy approach, and can inform sample size calculations for future intervention studies.
Clinical Trial Registration: NCT02574000 (clinicaltrials.gov).
Citation
Shoulder pain after recent stroke (SPARS): hemiplegic shoulder pain incidence within 72 hours post-stroke and 8–10 week follow-up (NCT 02574000)