| Literature DB >> 7886466 |
K D Heller1, J Forst, R Forst.
Abstract
Three-hundred and twenty-nine cases of posterior dislocation of the shoulder documented in 300 articles published in the international literature are reviewed. They included 130 cases in which the duration of the dislocation was longer than 6 weeks and the dislocation could be classified as persistent primary dislocation. This group is the second largest group following that with acute primary dislocation. The mechanism of injury may be direct or indirect force: trauma, convulsions or electrocution are usually responsible for this type of dislocation, which often persists for longer than 6 weeks. Anatomically, 97.5% of dislocations are classified as subacromial. Posterior dislocation of the shoulder is commonly misdiagnosed on plain antero-posterior radiographs, and in over 50% of cases the diagnosis was missed on first examination. The typical signs of primary traumatic posterior dislocation of the shoulder are described. Management of persistent traumatic posterior dislocation of the shoulder depends on the size of the anterior Hill-Sachs lesion, the precipitating mechanism and the duration of dislocation. The results of 109 surgically and 24 conservatively treated dislocations of this type that have been published in the international literature are reviewed. Closed reduction is indicated in carefully selected cases with an anterior Hill-Sachs lesion under 15% of the size of humeral head (measured in the axillary view) that has been dislocation for less than 2 months. In most due to convulsions there was a distinct anterior Hill-Sachs lesion, which led to recurrence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1995 PMID: 7886466
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Unfallchirurg ISSN: 0177-5537 Impact factor: 1.000