Dislocation Basics - Joint Uncoupling 101
- Dislocation: Total loss of articular congruity between joint surfaces.
- Subluxation: Partial loss of articular congruity.
- Types:
- Traumatic: Most common; due to injury.
- Pathological: Underlying joint disease (e.g., infection, RA).
- Congenital: Present at birth (e.g., DDH).
- Terminology:
- Acute: Recent.
- Chronic: Unreduced > 3 weeks.
- Recurrent: Multiple episodes.
- Open: Associated skin breach.
- Closed: Skin intact.
⭐ Always assess neurovascular status distal to a dislocation, as injury is common.
Shoulder Dislocation - Arm Adrift Antics
- Types & Mechanisms:
- Anterior (>95%): Abduction, external rotation, extension. Arm abducted & externally rotated.
⭐ Axillary nerve is the most commonly injured nerve in anterior shoulder dislocation.
- Posterior (rare): Adduction, internal rotation, flexion. Arm adducted & internally rotated.
- Inferior (Luxatio erecta): Arm overhead.
- Anterior (>95%): Abduction, external rotation, extension. Arm abducted & externally rotated.
- Clinical: Deformity (loss of deltoid contour), pain, ↓ROM.
- X-rays: AP, axillary/Y-view.
- Lesions: Bankart (anteroinferior labrum), Hill-Sachs (posterolateral humeral head).
- Management:
- Reduction (Kocher, Stimson). Immobilization.
- 📌 ALAS: Anterior Luxation Axillary nerve Stimson.
- Complications: Axillary nerve injury, recurrence, rotator cuff tear, adhesive capsulitis. oka
Elbow Dislocation - Olecranon Outbursts
- Types: Posterior (most common, FOOSH with elbow extension), anterior (rare), divergent.
- Clinical: Obvious deformity, severe pain, swelling. Elbow held in flexion.
- X-rays (AP/Lat): Check for associated fractures (radial head, coronoid process).
⭐ Terrible Triad: Elbow dislocation + radial head fracture + coronoid process fracture; indicates significant instability.
- Management: Prompt closed reduction. Check neurovascular status (median/ulnar nerves, brachial artery). Immobilize, then early mobilization.
- Complications: Neurovascular injury, stiffness (myositis ossificans), recurrent instability.
Hip Dislocation - Femur's Forced Exit
- Types & Mechanism:
- Posterior: Most common (dashboard). Limb: flexed, adducted, int. rotated (📌 PIPA).
- Anterior: Forced abduction. Limb: flexed, abducted, ext. rotated (📌 ABE).
- Clinical: Severe pain, ↓ ROM.
- Investigations: X-rays (AP pelvis, lat. hip). Check associated #.
- Management: Emergency reduction (Allis). Post-reduction CT. Neurovascular check (sciatic).
⭐ Sciatic nerve injury (common peroneal) common in posterior dislocation.
- Complications: Sciatic nerve palsy, AVN femoral head, OA, recurrence.
Avascular necrosis of femoral head after hip dislocation
Knee & Patella Dislocation - Popliteal Perils
- Knee (Tibiofemoral) Dislocation: ⚠️ Vascular emergency!
- Types: Ant, Post, Med, Lat, Rotatory.
- Popliteal artery injury in ~30-40%.
- Clinical: Deformity, pain, instability. Check pulses!
- Ix: X-ray, Angio/Doppler if vascular injury.
- Mx: Reduce, vascular repair, ExFix/surgery.
- Complications: Popliteal art/nerve injury, compartment syndrome.
- Patellar Dislocation: Usually lateral.
- Clinical: Lateral patella, pain, 'giving way'.
- Ix: X-ray (sunrise view).
- Mx: Reduction (medial pressure + knee extension), immobilize, physio (VMO).
- Complications: Recurrence, chondromalacia. ⭐ > Posterior knee dislocations carry the highest risk of popliteal artery injury.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Anterior shoulder dislocation: most common; risk of axillary nerve injury.
- Posterior shoulder dislocation: from seizures/electric shock; see light bulb sign on X-ray.
- Posterior hip dislocation: sciatic nerve injury; limb shortened, adducted, internally rotated.
- Anterior hip dislocation: limb presents abducted and externally rotated.
- Elbow dislocation (posterior common): brachial artery, median/ulnar nerve at risk.
- Knee dislocation: true vascular emergency; suspect popliteal artery injury.
- Lunate dislocation: most common carpal dislocation; median nerve symptoms, spilled teacup sign.
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