Shoulder Conditions Flashcards
What is a shoulder dislocation?
Head of humerus comes entirely out of the glenoid cavity
What is subluxation?
Partial dislocation
What are the majority of shoulder dislocations?
Anterior- 90%
Head of humerus moves anteriorly in relation to the glenoid cavity
What are posterior dislocations associated with?
Electric shocks
Epileptic seizures
What damage does dislocation cause?
Bankart lesions
Hill- Sachs lesions
Axillary nerve damage
Fractures- humeral head, acromion, clavicle
Rotator cuff tears
What are Bankart lesions?
Tears to anterior labrum due to repeated dislocations
What are Hill-Sachs lesions?
Compression fractures of the humeral head
What is the presentation of shoulder dislocation?
Muscles go into spasm and tighten around the joint
Patient holding arm against body
Flattened deltoid
Palpable bulge at front of shoulder
What investigations are carried out in shoulder dislocation?
X ray- confirm dislocation, exclude fracture
MRI- Bankart and Hill-Sachs lesions
Arthroscopy
What is acute management of dislocation?
Relocate ASAP
Analgesia, muscle relaxants, sedation
Gas and air
Arm sling
Surgery if a fracture
Immobilisation
What is ongoing management of dislocation?
Physiotherapy
Shoulder stabilisation surgery
What is frozen shoulder?
Adhesive capsulitis
Causes shoulder pain and stiffness
What is primary adhesive capsulitis?
Occurs spontaneously without any trigger
What is secondary adhesive capsulitis?
Occurs in response to trauma, surgery or immobilisation
What is the pathology of frozen shoulder?
Inflammation and fibrosis in the joint capsule lead to adhesions (scar tissue)
The adhesions bind the capsule, tightening it around the joint and restricting movement