# Shoulder Instability in the U.S. Military: A Systematic Review of Epidemiology, Operative Management, and Outcomes

**Authors:** John R. Tyler, Hunter Czajkowski, Alexis B. Sandler, Nicholas M. Brown, Dane Salazar, John P. Scanaliato, Jonna Peterson, Nata Parnes

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15010110 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2025-12-23

## TL;DR

This study reviews shoulder instability in U.S. military personnel, finding higher rates than in civilians and varied surgical outcomes.

## Contribution

The study provides the first systematic quantification of shoulder instability epidemiology and surgical outcomes in U.S. military populations.

## Key findings

- Shoulder instability incidence in U.S. military is 2.07 per 1000 person-years.
- Anterior instability accounts for 83.9% of unidirectional cases.
- Arthroscopic Bankart repair is the most common surgical procedure reported.

## Abstract

Background: Shoulder instability imposes a substantial burden in U.S. military populations, yet epidemiology and outcomes reporting is heterogeneous. This study aims to quantify the epidemiology of shoulder instability among U.S. active-duty servicemembers and to report operative management patterns and outcomes. Methods: A systematic review was performed by searching MEDLINE, EMBASE, Scopus, Cochrane, and SPORTDiscus through 1 August 2025. Eligible studies enrolled U.S. active-duty servicemembers with clinical and/or radiographic evidence of instability. After a single comprehensive search with uniform inclusion criteria, studies were assigned to two prespecified cohorts: (1) epidemiology (incidence, directionality, risk factors) and (2) operative management/outcomes (procedure distribution, failure, complications, return to duty [RTD] and return to sport [RTS]). Incidence was pooled as a person-years–weighted fixed-effect estimate; directionality proportions were meta-analyzed with random-effects (logit-transformed) models among patient-level, unidirectional cases. Results: Forty-nine studies were included (epidemiology, n = 8; outcomes, n = 41). Three epidemiologic datasets (42,310 events; 20,472,363 person-years) yielded a pooled military incidence of 2.07 per 1000 person-years (95% CI, 2.05–2.09). Among unidirectional cases (n = 916 shoulders), anterior instability comprised 83.9% (95% CI, 70.5–91.9) and posterior the remaining 16.1% (95% CI, 8.1–29.5). Outcome series most commonly reported arthroscopic Bankart repair (n = 933 shoulders), bony augmentation (e.g., Latarjet/Bristow; n = 700), posterior labral repair (n = 649), combined repairs (n = 511), and open Bankart (n = 442). Weighted mean failure ranged 4.7–23.6%; complications 5.2–10.9%; and reoperations 5.3–17.7%. RTD ranged 50.0–84.7% and RTS 4.8–75.0%. Conclusions: Shoulder instability in U.S. servicemembers occurs at rates exceeding population-based civilian estimates, with a relatively greater share of posterior and combined patterns. Operative outcomes vary substantially across procedures.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Shoulder Instability (MESH:D000070599), Bankart (MESH:D000070896), anterior instability (MESH:D043171)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

80 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12787026/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12787026