# Correlation between clinical, ultrasonographic and arthroscopic findings of subscapularis tears: A prospective study

**Authors:** Arvind Nair, Bishak S. Reddy, Anika Sait, Priya PS, Vivek Pandey

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.jor.2025.04.016 · Journal of Orthopaedics · 2025-04-28

## TL;DR

This study compares how well clinical tests and ultrasound can detect subscapularis tears compared to arthroscopy, finding that Gerber's lift-off test is most accurate for partial tears.

## Contribution

This study provides a prospective evaluation and ranking of diagnostic methods for subscapularis tears using arthroscopy as the gold standard.

## Key findings

- Gerber's lift-off test is most sensitive and accurate for partial and overall subscapularis tears.
- Belly-off test is most specific for detecting partial and full-thickness tears.
- Ultrasonography is more accurate than clinical tests for full-thickness tears.

## Abstract

Preoperative clinical and ultrasonographic (USG) diagnosis of subscapularis (SSc) tear has always been challenging, with studies reporting varying diagnostic values of these modalities compared with arthroscopy. This prospective study aimed to report the diagnostic values of clinical tests and ultrasonography for SSc tear and to correlate with respect to arthroscopy.

Clinical and USG data were collected preoperatively from 144 patients who underwent arthroscopy for rotator cuff tears. Lafosse's classification was used for classifying SSc tear. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV), and accuracy with receiver operating curve (ROC) of clinical tests and USG were statistically analyzed and compared with arthroscopic findings.

Among 144 patients, 70 % had subscapularis tear. Gerber's lift-off was the most sensitive and accurate in diagnosing partial thickness tear (72.1 %, 63.3 %) and overall any tear (77.4 %, 76.7 %). Belly-off was the most specific test in detecting partial-thickness tear (61.5 %) and any tear (88.9 %). Bear hug test (BHT) was the most specific (65.9 %) and accurate (69.8 %) for diagnosing a full-thickness tear. ROC analysis showed maximum accuracy with the belly-off for full-thickness tears and Gerber's lift-off for partial-thickness tears. Compared to clinical tests, USG has lower accuracy in detecting partial tears and higher accuracy (81.7 %) for complete tears.

The diagnostic performance of all modalities for detecting any tear is ranked as follows: Gerber's Lift-Off, Belly Press, Passive Lift-Off, USG, Belly-Off, and BHT. Results of partial tears were similar. For full-thickness tears: USG, Belly-Off, BHT, Passive Lift-Off, Belly press and Gerber's Lift-Off.

Level III, Prospective.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** rotator cuff tears (MESH:D000070636), thickness (MESH:C535655), SSc tear (MESH:D012167)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12127584/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12127584