Shoulder Dislocation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Shoulder Dislocation

Description:

Shoulder Dislocation – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:3228
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 62
Provided by: Heather568
Learn more at: https://www.kgmu.org
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Shoulder Dislocation


1
Shoulder Dislocation
2
s
3
(No Transcript)
4
Shoulder dislocation
  • 1. DISLOCATION- COMPLETE LOSS OF GLENOHUMERAL
    ARTICULATION . CAUSE- ACUTE TRAUMA
  • 2. SUBLUXATION - PARTIAL LOSS OF ARTICULATION
    WITH SYMPTOMS. CAUSE- REPITITIVE TRAUMA.
  • 3. LAXITY - PARTIAL LOSS OF GLENOHUMERAL
    ARTICULATION BUT PAITENT IS ASYMPTOMATIC.
    SHOULDER INSTABLITY

5
Shoulder dislocation
  • Shoulder is the most commonly dislocated
    joint45
  • 1 shallowness of glenoid socket
  • 2Extraordinary ROM
  • 3 ligamentus laxity
  • Humeral head 3x larger than glenoid fossa
  • glenohumeral articulation is minimally
    constrained by bony anatomy alone
  • stability is conferred by a series of dynamic and
    static soft tissue restraints

6
Shoulder dislocation
  • Type of dislocation
  • Traumatic Dislocations
  • Atraumatic dislocation
  • Acquird dislocation

7
Traumatic dislocation
  • Single force applies excessive overload to the
    soft tissues of the joint and often damages the
    Glenoid Labrum (Bankart Lesion) and the joint
    capsule
  • Anterior 85
  • Posterior10
  • Inferior 5

8
Atraumatic dislocation
  • Athelete who has joint hyperlaxity and had
    multiple episode of joint subluxation
  • Minor injury can results into dislocation
  • Congenital hypermobility or muscle weakness.

9
Acquired dislocation
  • Sports such as swimming, gymnastics and baseball
    where repetitive micro-trauma, poor stretching
    and motion lead to capsular stretching. Eventual
    feeling of instability

10
Traumatic anterior dislocation
  • Mech. of injury
  • Arm in abduction and external rotation. Force
    is taken on the hand or arm which increases the
    external rotation of the arm causing the head of
    the humerus to dislocate

11
  • Clinical symptom
  • Pain severe
  • Hold limb with normal limb by side of body.
  • Abduction and external rotation.
  • Pt cant touch apposite shoulder dugos test

12
Clinical Evaluation
  • PE
  • Prominent acromion, sulcus sign, palpable humeral
    head anteriorly
  • Neuro integrity of axillary and musculcutaneous
    nerves
  • Apprehension Test reproduces sense of
    instability and pain in shoulder reduced prior to
    exam

13
Radiographic Evaluation
  • AP fracture dislo
  • Axillary
  • Special Views
  • West Point axillary for visualization of glenoid
    rim
  • Hill-Sach view internal rotation view
  • Stryker Notch view 90 of posterolateral humeral
    head

14
Management
  • Pre-Medication
  • Reduction Maneuvers
  • Post-Reduction Immobilization

15
Pre-Medication
  • Methods of Premedication prior to Reduction
  • None
  • Intraarticular Lidocaine
  • IV Sedation
  • Supraclavicular Block
  • Suprascapular Block

16
IV Sedation vs Intraarticular Lidocaine Injection
Intra-articular Lidocaine Injection is Preferred
over IV Sedation
17
Reduction Maneuvers
  • Is there an Ideal Method for Reduction?
  • Over 24 Techniques Described
  • Most Common Techniques
  • Kocher (71-100)
  • External Rotation (78-90)
  • Milch (70-89)
  • Stimson (91-96)
  • Traction/Countertraction
  • Scapular Manipulation (79-96)

18
Kocher Maneuver
  • TEA I
  • Traction
  • ER
  • Adduction
  • arm is internally rotated
  • Modified no traction

19
Stimson method
20
Traction/Countertraction
  • Arm in some abduction
  • Traction applied to arm
  • Assistant applies firm counter-traction with
    sheet across the body

21
Hippocratic method
  • Surgeon use foot applies on axilla for
    countertraction

22
Post-Reduction Immobilization
  • Is immobilization necessary?
  • What Method
  • is Best?

23
(No Transcript)
24
Does immobilization reduce recurrence?
  • usually fracture associated with dislocation
    are reduced with reduction of dislocation.
  • Immobilization for 3-4 weeks after shoulder
    dislocation does NOT change the prognosis
    compared with immediate mobilization

25
Internal vs External Rotation
  • Level II RCT Itoi JBJS 2007
  • ER for 3 weeks
  • Recurrence rate 32
  • IR for 3 weeks
  • Recurrence rate 60
  • P 0.007

26
Complication of ant.shoulder dislocation
  • Early
  • Rotator cuff tear
  • Nerve injury
  • Vascular injury
  • Fracture dislocation

27
Late complication
  • Stiffness
  • Unreduced disloction undiagnos in unconcious and
    old pts.
  • closed reduction done upto 6 wks and open
    reduction done after 6wks in young pts. Willful
    neglect in old pts
  • Recurrent dislocation

28
Post. Shoulder dislocation
  • The arm is in flexion and adduction. Force is
    taken on the hand, causing the head of the
    humerus to be push out the glenoid posteriorly.
  • h/o convulsion or electric shock

29
  • Clinical sign and symptom
  • Diag is often missed
  • Internal rotation
  • Flat front of shoulder
  • Prominent corocoid
  • Frominent post aspect of shoulder

30
(No Transcript)
31
  • Radiology
  • AP- electric bulb apperence and empty glenoid
    sign.
  • Lat post displacement

32
  • Treatmet
  • Under GA reduction by pulling arm in adduction to
    dis engage head then lateraly rotate while
    pushing head anteriorly.
  • Immobilization in ext rotation and abduction for
    3 wks.

33
Inferior shoulder dislocationluxatio erecta
  • Arm is in excessive abduction and a force is
    taken on the hand pushing the head of the humerus
    inferiorly out of the glenoid.
  • Clinical features
  • limb in abduction

34
Inferior shoulder dislocationluxatio erecta
  • Xrays AP
  • LAT

35
Inferior shoulder dislocationluxatio erecta
  • Treatment
  • Traction and counter traction.
  • Immobilised for 3 wks

36
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
  • Anterior dislocations account for 95 of
    shoulder dislocations
  • Typically occurs in athletes who are lt 25 years
    old
  • Males are much more commonly affected than are
    females (85-90)

37
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
  • Pathology most commonly found in shoulders
    following a dislocation is a Bankart lesion
  • Disruption of the labrum and the contiguous
    anterior band of the inferior glenohumeral
    ligamentous complex (IGHLC)
  • Bankhart lesion occurs gt 85 of the time

38
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
39
Bony bankart
40
  • Hillsach lesion posteriolateral indentation of
    humeral head.
  • Enganging lesion is indication of surgery

41
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
42
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
  • Classification
  • Instability can be classified by
  • direction of instability (anterior, posterior,
    multidirectional)
  • degree of instability (subluxation, dislocation)
  • etiology (traumatic, atraumatic, overuse)
  • timing (acute, recurrent, fixed)

43
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
  • TUBS or Torn Loose
  • T raumatic aetiology, U nidirectional
    instability, B ankart lesion is the pathology, S
    urgery is required
  • AMBRI or Born Loose
  • A traumatic minor trauma, M ultidirectional
    instability may be present, B ilateral
    asymptomatic shoulder is also loose, R
    ehabilitation is the treatment of choice, I
    nferior capsular shift surgery required if
    conservative measures fail

44
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
45
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
  • Shoulder Stabilisers Static
  • Intracapsular pressure
  • Labrum increases depth of the glenoid by 50
  • Ligaments main static restraints
  • capsule

46
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
47
Shoulder Stabilisers
  • Dynamic
  • Rotator cuff and biceps

48
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
49
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
50
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
51
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
52
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
  • How many number of dislocation is indication of
    surgery.
  • Frist dislocation in young pateint specially
    sports person.
  • Two time dislocation is definit indication of
    surgery.

53
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
  • Open surgery done for old and multiple recurrent
    dislocation due plastic deformation of tissue or
    larg bony defects.
  • Arthroscopic surgery is done fresh case of
    recurrent dislocation.
  • Advantage

54
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
  • Anatomic Repairs
  • Restoring normal anatomy is guiding principle in
    surgery to correct anterior shoulder instability
  • If the labrum has been detached, it is reattached
    to the anterior glenoid rim
  • If the capsule has been stripped off the glenoid
    neck, the capsule is reattached to the bony
    glenoid rim
  • If greater than one-third of the glenoid fossa is
    involved, a bone block procedure such as a
    Bristow or iliac crest bone graft may be
    considered

55
Bankart repair
56
Bankart repair
57
Recurrent shoulder dislocation
  • Nonanatomic Repairs open
  • Bristow and latarjet
  • Transfer coracoid process to anteroinferior
    glenoid
  • Sling effect and bone block
  • Putti-Platt -Subscapularis is cut and shortaned
    Magnusen-Stack
  • subscapularis tendon is detached from its
    insertion on the lesser tuberosity, transferred
    laterally to the greater tuberosity

58
Latarjet procedure
59
Latarjet procedure
60
Putti-plat operation
  • Putti-plat operation
  • limited ER

61
  • Thanks
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com