Nicklas Olsson’s research while affiliated with Sahlgrenska University Hospital and other places

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Publications (26)


Modified Euler and Rüedi classification of scapular fractures
Distribution of BB injury per age interval
Distribution of BB lesions per month
Type of treatment for the BB lesions (missing—56)
Treatment options for high- and low-energy-induced BB injuries

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Incidence of bony Bankart lesions in Sweden: a study of 790 cases from the Swedish fracture register
  • Article
  • Full-text available

September 2023

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469 Reads

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3 Citations

Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research

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Baldur Thorolfsson

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Nicklas Olsson

Background A bony Bankart lesion directly affects the stability of the shoulder by reducing the glenoid joint-contact area. The aim of this study was to report on the epidemiological data relating to bony Bankart lesions in Sweden using the Swedish fracture register. The purpose is to evaluate age and sex distribution in the population with bony Bankart lesions, its impact on treatment strategy and further to analyse patient-reported outcomes. Methods This was an epidemiological descriptive study. The inclusion criteria were all patients with a unilateral bony Bankart lesion registered between April 2012 and April 2019. The patients’ specific data (age, sex, type and time of injury, treatment option and patient-reported outcomes) were extracted from the Swedish fracture register database. Results A total of 790 unilateral bony Bankart fractures were identified. The majority of the patients were male (58.7%). The median age for all patients at the time of injury was 57 years. Females had a higher median age of 66 years, compared with males, 51 years. Most of the bony Bankart lesions, 662 (91.8%), were registered as a low-energy trauma. More than two-thirds of all treatment registered cases, 509/734 patients (69.3%), were treated non-surgically, 225 (30.7%) were treated surgically, while, in 17 patients (7.5% of all surgically treated patients), the treatment was changed from non-surgical to surgical due to recurrent instability. Surgical treatment was chosen for 149 (35%) of the males and for 76 (25%) of the females. Patient quality of life decreased slightly in both surgically and non-surgically treated groups 1 year after bony Bankart injury. Conclusion This national register-based study provides detailed information on the epidemiology, choice of treatment and patient-reported outcomes in a large cohort of bony Bankart lesions. Most bony Bankart lesions affected males between 40 and 75 years after low-energy falls and non-surgical treatment dominated.

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Figure 3
Mean age of the patients for different treatment options (Missing -56)
Treatment type distribution in relation to sex.
Bony Bankart lesions are common. A study of 790 cases from the Swedish Fracture Register

July 2023

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61 Reads

Background: A bony Bankart lesion is a common type of fracture associated with anterior shoulder dislocation. This type of fracture does directly affect the stability of the shoulder by reducing the glenoid joint-contact area. The aim of this study was to report on the epidemiological data relating to bony Bankart lesions in Sweden using the Swedish Fracture Register. The purpose is to evaluate age and sex distribution in the population with bony Bankart lesions, its impact on treatment strategy and further to analyse patient-reported outcomes. Methods: An epidemiological descriptive study. The inclusion criteria were all patients with a unilateral bony Bankart lesion registered between April 2012 and April 2019. The patients’ specific data (age, sex, type and time of injury, treatment option and patient-reported outcomes) were extracted from the Swedish Fracture Register database. Results: A total of 790 unilateral bony Bankart fractures were identified. The majority of the patients were male (58.7%). The mean age ± SD for all patients at the time of injury was 56.3 ± 16.1 years. Females had a higher mean age, 64.3 ± 12.8, compared with males, 50.7 ± 15.7. Most of the bony Bankart lesions, 662 (91.8%), were registered as a low-energy trauma. More than two-thirds of all treatment registered cases, 509/734 patients (69.3%), were treated non-surgically, 225 (30.7%) were treated surgically, while, in 17 patients (7.5% of all surgically treated patients), the treatment was changed from non-surgical to surgical due to recurrent instability. Surgical treatment was chosen for 149 (35%) of the males and for 76 (25%) of the females. Patient quality of life decreased slightly in both surgically and non-surgically treated groups one year after bony Bankart injury. Conclusion: This national register-based study provides detailed information on the epidemiology, choice of treatment and patient-reported outcomes in a large cohort of bony Bankart lesions. Most bony Bankart lesions affected males between 40 and 75 years after low-energy falls and non-surgical treatment dominated.


Mean age and sex at the time of injury
Mean age of the patients for different treatment options
Treatment type distribution in relation to sex.
Choice of treatment for high-and low-energy-induced BB lesions
Bony Bankart lesions: epidemiology of 790 cases from the Swedish Fracture Register

April 2023

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27 Reads

Background: A bony Bankart lesion is a common type of fracture associated with anterior shoulder dislocation. This type of fracture could directly affect the stability of the shoulder by reducing the glenoid joint-contact area. The aim of this study was to report and describe epidemiological data relating to bony Bankart lesions in Sweden using the Swedish Fracture Register. The purpose is to evaluate age and sex distribution in the population with BB lesions, its impact on treatment strategy and to analyse patient-reported outcomes. Methods: An epidemiological descriptive study based on data from the national Swedish Fracture Register. The inclusion criteria were all patients with a unilateral bony Bankart lesion registered between April 2012 and April 2019. The patients’ specific data (age, sex, type and time of injury, treatment option and patient-reported outcomes) were extracted from the Swedish Fracture Register database. Results: A total of 790 unilateral bony Bankart fractures were identified. The majority of the patients were male (58.7%). The mean age ± SD for all patients at the time of injury was 56.3 ± 16.1 years. Females had a higher mean age, 64.3 ± 12.8, compared with males, 50.7 ± 15.7. Most of the BB lesions, 91.8% (662), were registered as a low-energy trauma. More than two-thirds of all cases, 509 patients (70.1%), were treated non-surgically, 217 patients (29.9%) were treated surgically, while, in 17 patients (7.8% of all surgically treated patients), the treatment was changed from non-surgical to surgical. Surgical treatment was chosen for 34% (146) of males and for 23% (71) of females. Patient quality of life decreased slightly in both surgically and non-surgically treated groups one year after BB injury. Conclusion: This national register-based study provides detailed information on the epidemiology, choice of treatment and patient-reported outcomes in a large cohort of bony Bankart lesions. Most BB lesions affected males between 40 and 75 years after low-energy falls and were treated non-surgically.


Patients with chronic Achilles tendon rupture have persistent limitations in patient-reported function and calf muscle function one year after surgical treatment – a case series

February 2022

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86 Reads

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12 Citations

Purpose Evaluate the one-year postoperative outcomes in patients with Chronic Achilles tendon rupture. Methods Patients surgically treated for Chronic Achilles tendon rupture ( n = 22, 14 males and 8 females, mean age 61 ± 15) were evaluated by Achilles tendon Total Rupture Score, The Physical Activity Scale, The Foot and Ankle Outcome Score, Calf muscle endurance test, counter movement jump, Hopping, ultrasound measurement of tendon length, Achilles Tendon Resting Angle, dorsi flexion range of motion and calf muscle circumference. Muscle function and tendon length outcomes on the injured side were compared with the healthy side. Results The patients scored a mean of 62 ± 26 on the Achilles tendon Total Rupture Score. Median scores on the injured compared with the healthy side were lower in heel-rise repetitions (20 vs 24 cm, p = 0.004), hel-rise height (8 vs 10 cm, p < 0.001), heel-rise total work (872 vs 1590 joule, p < 0.001) and hopping ratio (0.37 vs 0.48, p = 0.005). Median calf circumference was smaller (37 vs 38 cm, p = 0.001) and the mean tendon elongation greater on the injured side; Achilles tendon resting angle (55 vs 50°, p < 0.001) and ultrasound (22.4 vs 20.5 cm, p = 0.006). Conclusions At one year postoperatively, patients with chronic Achilles tendon rupture reported persistent limitations in subjective foot and ankle function. Heel-rise height and total work as well as hopping ratio were not recovered, and there was an elongation of the injured Achilles tendon compared with the healthy tendon. Level of evidence IV


Cost-effectiveness analysis of surgical versus non-surgical management of acute Achilles tendon ruptures

April 2018

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167 Reads

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43 Citations

Knee Surgery Sports Traumatology Arthroscopy

Purpose: An Achilles tendon rupture is a common injury that typically affects people in the middle of their working lives. The injury has a negative impact in terms of both morbidity for the individual and the risk of substantial sick leave. The aim of this study was to investigate the cost-effectiveness of surgical compared with non-surgical management in patients with an acute Achilles tendon rupture. Methods: One hundred patients (86 men, 14 women; mean age, 40 years) with an acute Achilles tendon rupture were randomised (1:1) to either surgical treatment or non-surgical treatment, both with an accelerated rehabilitation protocol (surgical n = 49, non-surgical n = 51). One of the surgical patients was excluded due to a partial re-rupture and five surgical patients were lost to the 1-year economic follow-up. One patient was excluded due to incorrect inclusion and one was lost to the 1-year follow-up in the non-surgical group. The cost was divided into direct and indirect costs. The direct cost is the actual cost of health care, whereas the indirect cost is the production loss related to the impact of the patient's injury in terms of lost ability to work. The health benefits were assessed using quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Sampling uncertainty was assessed by means of non-parametric boot-strapping. Results: Pre-injury, the groups were comparable in terms of demographic data and health-related quality of life (HRQoL). The mean cost of surgical management was €7332 compared with €6008 for non-surgical management (p = 0.024). The mean number of QALYs during the 1-year time period was 0.89 and 0.86 in the surgical and non-surgical groups respectively. The (incremental) cost-effectiveness ratio was €45,855. Based on bootstrapping, the cost-effectiveness acceptability curve shows that the surgical treatment is 57% likely to be cost-effective at a threshold value of €50,000 per QALY. Conclusions: Surgical treatment was more expensive compared with non-surgical management. The cost-effectiveness results give a weak support (57% likelihood) for the surgical treatment to be cost-effective at a willingness to pay per QALY threshold of €50,000. This is support for surgical treatment; however, additionally cost-effectiveness studies alongside RCTs are important to clarify which treatment option is preferred from a cost-effectiveness perspective. Level of evidence: I.


Calf Muscle Performance Deficits Remain 7 Years After an Achilles Tendon Rupture

October 2017

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145 Reads

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70 Citations

The American Journal of Sports Medicine

Background: Optimizing calf muscle performance seems to play an important role in minimizing impairments and symptoms after an Achilles tendon rupture (ATR). The literature lacks long-term follow-up studies after ATR that describe calf muscle performance over time. Purpose: The primary aim was to evaluate calf muscle performance and patient-reported outcomes at a mean of 7 years after ATR in patients included in a prospective, randomized controlled trial. A secondary aim was to evaluate whether improvement in calf muscle performance continued after the 2-year follow-up. Study design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2. Methods: Sixty-six subjects (13 women, 53 men) with a mean age of 50 years (SD, 8.5 years) were evaluated at a mean of 7 years (SD, 1 year) years after their ATR. Thirty-four subjects had surgical treatment and 32 had nonsurgical treatment. Patient-reported outcomes were evaluated with Achilles tendon Total Rupture Score (ATRS) and Physical Activity Scale (PAS). Calf muscle performance was evaluated with single-leg standing heel-rise test, concentric strength power heel-rise test, and single-legged hop for distance. Limb Symmetry Index (LSI = injured side/healthy side × 100) was calculated for side-to-side differences. Results: Seven years after ATR, the injured side showed decreased values in all calf muscle performance tests ( P < .001-.012). Significant improvement in calf muscle performance did not continue after the 2-year follow-up. Heel-rise height increased significantly ( P = .002) between the 1-year (10.8 cm) and the 7-year (11.5 cm) follow-up assessments. The median ATRS was 96 (of a possible score of 100) and the median PAS was 4 (of a possible score of 6), indicating minor patient-reported symptoms and fairly high physical activity. No significant differences were found in calf muscle performance or patient-reported outcomes between the treatment groups except for the LSI for heel-rise repetitions. Conclusion: Continued deficits in calf muscle endurance and strength remained 7 years after ATR. No continued improvement in calf muscle performance occurred after the 2-year follow-up except for heel-rise height.


Functional Outcomes of Achilles Tendon Minimally Invasive Repair Using 4- and 6-Strand Nonabsorbable Suture: A Cohort Comparison Study

August 2017

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2,331 Reads

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34 Citations

Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine

Background: The aim of management of Achilles tendon rupture is to reduce tendon lengthening and maximize function while reducing the rerupture rate and minimizing other complications. Purpose: To determine changes in Achilles tendon resting angle (ATRA), heel-rise height, patient-reported outcomes, return to play, and occurrence of complications after minimally invasive repair of Achilles tendon ruptures using nonabsorbable sutures. Study design: Cohort study; Level of evidence, 3. Methods: Between March 2013 and August 2015, a total of 70 patients (58 males, 12 females) with a mean age of 42 ± 8 years were included and evaluated at 6 weeks and 3, 6, 9, and 12 months after repair of an Achilles tendon rupture. Surgical repair was performed using either 4-strand or 6-strand nonabsorbable sutures. After surgery, patients were mobilized, fully weightbearing using a functional brace. Early active movement was permitted starting at 2 weeks. Results: There were no significant differences in the ATRA, Achilles Tendon Total Rupture Score (ATRS), and Heel-Rise Height Index (HRHI) between the 4- and 6-strand repairs. The mean (SD) relative ATRA was -13.1° (6.6°) (dorsiflexion) following injury; this was reduced to 7.6° (4.8°) (plantar flexion) directly after surgery. During initial rehabilitation at 6 weeks, the relative ATRA was 0.6° (7.4°) (neutral) and -7.0° (5.3°) (dorsiflexion) at 3 months, after which ATRA improved significantly with time to 12 months (P = .005). At 12 months, the median ATRS was 93 (range, 35-100), and the mean (SD) HRHI and Heel-Rise Repetition Index were 81% (0.22%) and 82.9% (0.17%), respectively. The relative ATRA at 3 and 12 months correlated with HRHI (r = 0.617, P < .001 and r = 0.535, P < .001, respectively). Conclusion: Increasing the number of suture strands from 4 to 6 does not alter the ATRA or HRHI after minimally invasive Achilles tendon repair. The use of a nonabsorbable suture during minimally invasive repair when used together with accelerated rehabilitation did not prevent the development of an increased relative ATRA. The ATRA at 3 months after surgery correlated with heel-rise height at 12 months.



Free/Turndown Gastrocnemius Flap Augmentation

April 2017

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17 Reads

Surgical treatment is recommended for a chronic Achilles tendon rupture, as well as a re-rupture. Chronic Achilles tendon ruptures are referred to those more than 4 weeks after initial injury. An end-to-end repair is considered insufficient for tendons with a chronic injury or re-rupture and reinforcement is recommended. Fascial reinforcement has not been shown to improve outcome for acute ruptures.


Open Standard Technique

April 2017

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26 Reads

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2 Citations

Acute Achilles tendon rupture usually occurs in the midportion 2–6 cm proximal from the insertion site of calcaneus. In general there are usually no warning symptoms and the injury frequently occurs with a very distinct ankle trauma. The rupture is generally total and partial Achilles tendon rupture is very rare in the cases of specific pop sensed and localized to the midportion of the tendon. The diagnosis is clinical with positive Thompson’s test (calf squeeze test), reduced plantar flexion strength, and a palpable gap in the tendon. Surgical and nonsurgical treatment is still debated, together with the timing of the key components of rehabilitation, e.g., weight-bearing, movement, and functional bracing [1]. Open surgery (end-to-end repair) may be considered the gold standard surgical procedure. There has been shown no advantage in a fascial turndown over end-to-end appositional repair for acute ruptures [2]. Primary repair without an augmentation can be performed approximately within 3 weeks. Contraindications include peripheral vascular diseases, skin affections, and systemic diseases with high risk of infection.


Citations (18)


... Bony Bankart injuries are a type of acute shoulder injury characterized by a labroligamentous complex with a fracture of the anterior glenoid rim and associated dislocation or subluxation of the shoulder joint [1]. Acute bony Bankart injuries typically occur as a result of high-energy trauma, such as sports-related injuries or motor vehicle accidents [2]. Twenty-three percent of Bankart cases are presented with bony Bankart lesions [3]. ...

Reference:

Acute Bony Bankart Injury With Glenoid Rim Fracture Treated by Arthroscopic Bankart Repair
Incidence of bony Bankart lesions in Sweden: a study of 790 cases from the Swedish fracture register

Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research

... Conversely, the control group displayed a delayed initial increase in temperature, indicating a normal but slowed progression through the healing cascade. While calf circumference is typically reduced in patients with chronic Achilles tendinopathy, it can be increased in the early stages of acute tendinopathy due to inflammation, which was observed in our collagenase-injection animal models (Nordenholm et al. 2022). Furthermore, animal models with increased calf circumference were noted to have limited mobility and range of motion of the lower extremity. ...

Patients with chronic Achilles tendon rupture have persistent limitations in patient-reported function and calf muscle function one year after surgical treatment – a case series

... Few original papers were found on the cost of treatment, but recent studies showed that surgical management was more expensive compared to non-surgical management. However, the costeffectiveness results indicate that surgical treatment is 57% likely to be cost-effective (34). Various functional outcomes, ATRS, AOFAS-AH, FAOS, FIL, Leppilahti score, MFAI, PAS, ROM, SMFA and VAS, were used to assess the treatment of AATR, which makes it difficult to analyze a particular outcome. ...

Cost-effectiveness analysis of surgical versus non-surgical management of acute Achilles tendon ruptures

Knee Surgery Sports Traumatology Arthroscopy

... In the gastrocnemius muscle, the percentage of fast muscle fibers is higher [51], and a decrease in the diameter of slow muscle fibers is associated with a decrease in exerted tension, while an increase in the proportion of fast muscle fibers indicates a decrease in muscle endurance. The increased percentage of fast-twitch fibers in this study, with or without exercise intervention, may be related to the decreased performance level after ATR [2,52]. Against our expectation, the EMS group did not prevent those muscle morphological changes. ...

Calf Muscle Performance Deficits Remain 7 Years After an Achilles Tendon Rupture
  • Citing Article
  • October 2017

The American Journal of Sports Medicine

... Additionally, these gaps in knowledge contribute to unpredictable recovery trajectories and RTP outcomes for athletes [86,[310][311][312]. Several factors, both patient-related (such as BMI, nutritional status, as well as comorbidities) and injury-related (such as delayed presentation, injury mechanism, and tendon gap size), are believed to influence recovery and outcomes after ATR [65,308,313,314]. ...

Functional Outcomes of Achilles Tendon Minimally Invasive Repair Using 4- and 6-Strand Nonabsorbable Suture: A Cohort Comparison Study

Orthopaedic Journal of Sports Medicine

... The open surgical method has been chosen instead of another, such as non-surgical, minimally invasive, and endoscopy surgery, because the evidence showed that tendinopathy area estimated more than 50% with calcification appearance. The augmentation method was also chosen because the Achilles tendinopathy area showed more than 50% (approximately 70%), a large defect area that can decrease the Achilles tendon function [13]. ...

Open Debridement of Mid-Portion Achilles Tendinopathy
  • Citing Chapter
  • April 2017

... This is likely due to increased participation in sports activities, an overall aging population, and a rise in obesity. 12,14,26 Restoring normal structure and function often requires repair and intensive rehabilitation due to the poor vascular perfusion of the midsection of the tendon. 8,21 However, surgical repair has been associated with substantial postoperative complications and possible reoperation or potential revision. ...

Open Standard Technique
  • Citing Chapter
  • April 2017

... Também o atleta desse estudo ficou treinando com cautela porque seguiu as recomendações da literatura para evitar uma re-ruptura (Germán et al., 2009). A avaliação da redução e do fim do inchaço no tendão calcâneo foi acompanhada pela ultrassonografia e por fotos com o intuito de verificar a completa recuperação do tendão nesse estágio após a lesão (Maffulli e Aberdeen, 1999;Olsson, 2013). Isso foi um dos parâmetros para o professor de Educação Física prescrever cargas A figura 4 apresenta a visão do tendão calcâneo direito espessado e do tendão calcâneo esquerdo "saudável" com fotos tiradas às 13 horas. ...

Acute Achilles Tendon Rupture
  • Citing Chapter
  • March 2014

... Diagnosen skal stilles klinisk ud fra ovenstående kriterier. Ultralyd-eller MR-skanning skal ikke anvendes i den normale udredning af akut akillesseneruptur, da en total akillesseneruptur kan fejltolkes som en partiel akillesseneruptur med billeddannende modaliteter [18]. ...

Individualiserad behandling viktig vid akut hälseneruptur
  • Citing Article
  • January 2014

Läkartidningen

... In the gastrocnemius muscle, the percentage of fast muscle fibers is higher [51], and a decrease in the diameter of slow muscle fibers is associated with a decrease in exerted tension, while an increase in the proportion of fast muscle fibers indicates a decrease in muscle endurance. The increased percentage of fast-twitch fibers in this study, with or without exercise intervention, may be related to the decreased performance level after ATR [2,52]. Against our expectation, the EMS group did not prevent those muscle morphological changes. ...

Recovery of calf muscle endurance 3 months after an Achilles tendon rupture
  • Citing Article
  • August 2015

Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports