Case Reports

Pain in right shoulder • recent influenza vaccination • history of hypertension and myocardial infarction • Dx?

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► Pain in right shoulder
► Recent influenza vaccination
► History of hypertension and myocardial infarction


 

References

THE CASE

A 61-year-old Caucasian woman presented with acute right shoulder pain that began after she received an influenza vaccination at a local pharmacy 2 weeks earlier. She pointed to the proximal-most aspect of her lateral right upper arm as the vaccination site. Her pain intensified with shoulder abduction, forward flexion, and reaching movements. She denied recent and past injury to her shoulder, fever, chills, rash, or skin changes at the injection site. She said her left shoulder did not bother her.

The patient had continued to participate in her aerobics class, despite the discomfort. Her medical history included hypertension and myocardial infarction, and the medications she was taking included lisinopril 20 mg/d, atenolol 50 mg/d, and aspirin 81 mg/d.

The physical exam revealed a thin female with no visible rashes or erythema on her right shoulder. While there was no deltoid atrophy in comparison to her unaffected shoulder, she generally had low muscle mass in both arms. A painful arc of abduction was present, as was pain with palpation of the supraspinatus insertion. No pain was appreciated over the short or long head of the biceps tendon or the sternoclavicular or acromioclavicular joints. Strength was 5/5 for all movements of the rotator cuff, but pain was reproduced with resisted shoulder abduction. A Hawkin’s test was positive, while Speed’s, Yergason’s, cross-arm abduction, and O’Brien’s tests were all negative.

THE DIAGNOSIS

Anteroposterior, Grashey, Y-view, and axillary view radiographs of the right shoulder were normal without any calcific tendinopathy, degenerative changes, or acute fractures. The patient’s history and physical exam were consistent with a rotator cuff tendinitis secondary to an immune response to an influenza vaccination that infiltrated the supraspinatus tendon.

DISCUSSION

Soreness, redness and swelling at the injection site, fever, body aches, and headache are common adverse effects of the influenza vaccine.1Although rare, acute brachial neuritis, infection, rotator cuff injuries, and contusions of the humeral head have also been reported. 2-5 Collectively, these conditions are referred to as shoulder injuries related to vaccination administration (SIRVA). There have been multiple SIRVA cases reported in the United States, and the US Court of Federal Claims has compensated >100 patients for SIRVA since 2011.6 There is currently no listing of SIRVA as a potential adverse reaction to the influenza vaccine on the package inserts or on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Web site.

Shoulder soreness lasting <72 hours without functional impairment is likely due to soreness at the injection site. If symptoms do not resolve within 72 to 96 hours, consider a more thorough workup, with SIRVA being a possible diagnosis.1,7 The etiology of SIRVA remains uncertain, but an inflammatory reaction from a vaccine mistakenly administered into the subacromial/subdeltoid bursa has been suggested. Whether this reaction is dependent on the nonantigenic or antigenic components of the vaccine has yet to be determined.

Symptoms of SIRVA include pain with arm movement, pain that is worse at night or awakens the patient from sleep, restricted range of motion, or arm weakness. Examination will reveal pain when resisting rotator cuff movements, particularly shoulder abduction. Advanced imaging can be considered when the diagnosis is in question. In previous cases of vaccine-associated rotator cuff tendinopathy in the authors’ practice, T2 magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has shown focal inflammatory signal within the supraspinatus tendon and subacromial bursa.

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