Shoulder Dislocation Flashcards
What is it?
> Disarticulation of humeral head with glenoid fossa
> Stability is provided by ligaments/labrum/rotator cuff and other muscles
Anterior Dislocation - mechanism
> Most common
Apprehension position (abduction and lateral rotation which causes anterior glide of humeral head) combined with a blow creating antero-inferior displacement (main restraint = inferior g/h ligament)
Anterior Dislocation - Associated injuries
> Hills-sachs lesion - small fracture/cortical depression in posterior humeral head (due to impact against rim of glenoid during displacement)
Bankart lesion - anterior damage to labrum (pulls away from rim)
Bony bankart = anterior glenoid fracture + labrum damage
Concurrent rotator cuff injuries
Neurovascular structures at risk (Brachial plexus and Axillary vessels)
Posterior Dislocation
> 5% of cases > Causes: blow to front of shoulder : during seizures > Often overlooked on x-ray > Occurs with - Concurrent Rotator Cuff injuries (particularly subscap) - Posterior labrum injuries
Recurrence
> 19.6% in 1st 2 years
> mostly in males and younger patients (almost 50% in 10-19 yr olds)
Associated Injuries
> SLAP lesion (Sup. labrum AP)
- arm = forcefully bent inwards and twisted
- humeral head can tear labrum + long head of biceps from glenoid (front to back direction)
- presents similar to AC joint injury - SLAP = painful on eccentric biceps loading
> HAGL (humeral avulsion glenohumeral ligament)
- Capsule and inferior glenohumeral ligament are torn off humerus (high risk of recurrence of dislocation)
> ALPSA lesion (Ant. Labral Periosteal sleeve avulsion)
- Anterior labro-ligamentous complex rolls up in sleeve like fashion
- becomes displaced inferiorly and medially
- a.k.a medialised bankarts lesion