Dislocation of Shoulder Joint

From WikiLectures

Dislocation of the shoulder joint is most often caused by indirect force during an impact on the shoulder with an abducted and externally rotated arm, i.e. the greater tuberosity rests on the acromion and the head luxates downward and forward.

Classification by warhead dislocation[edit | edit source]

    • 90% anterior (extra-, sub-, intracoracoid to subclavicular)
    • 10% posterior (subacromial or subspinal) and inferior (axillary, luxatio erecta)
    • sometimes simultaneous fractures (tuberculum majus, collum humeri)
    • Bankart's lesion – breaking off the front edge of the labrum glenoidale with the capsule and ligaments. glenohumeral
    • Hill–Sachs defect – impression of the dorsolateral part of the humeral head
    • these accompanying injuries responsible for recurrent dislocations in young people
Skiagram of dislocation of the shoulder joint

Clinical signs[edit | edit source]

  • deformation in the shoulder area (antalgic posture, protruding acromion, empty joint socket, dislocated head, inability to abduct)
  • innervation and peripheral blood supply must be examined

Diagnostics[edit | edit source]

    • X-ray image (always necessary to rule out fracture, before and after reduction) anteroposterior, axial, Y-projection
    • for recurrent dislocations and chronic instability CT or MRI

Complications[edit | edit source]

    • fracture (mainly separation of the big humerus or fracture of the neck of the humerus - dislocation fracture) - X-ray
    • rupture of the supraspinatus tendon – cannot be bent between 60°–120°
    • nerve injury ( n. axillaris ) – anesthesia over the deltoid tuberosity
    • vascular injury (a. + v. axillaris) – peripheral pulsation, venostasis
    • recurrent luxation (luxatio recidivans) – based on a Bankart lesion or a Hill–Sachs defect

Treatment[edit | edit source]

Conservative therapy[edit | edit source]

  • reposition under general anesthesia , only in case of recurrent dislocations and good cooperation of the patient can reposition be performed without anesthesia
  • repositioning maneuvers with pull + counter-pull: according to Arlt or Hippocrates, manipulation is less suitable (according to Kocher)
  • after reduction, perform X-ray again
  • fixation (Desault's or Gilchrist's bandage, orthosis) for a maximum of 3 weeks, followed by mobilization in a sling

Operative therapy[edit | edit source]

  • in irreparable dislocations (obsolete dislocations, interposition of soft tissues) or dislocation fractures, in recurrent dislocations with tearing of the glenoid labrum (Bankart's lesion)
  • arthroscopically or through the open route
  • in case of relapses, consider reconstruction (capsules, pits, proc. coracoideus) according to Eden-Hybinette


Links[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]