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Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor
19

Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Shoulder Dislocation

By Kristen, Erica and Taylor

Page 2: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Shoulder Separation vs.

Shoulder Dislocation

Shoulder Separation

• Contact between your clavicle and scapula

Shoulder Dislocation

• Loss of contact between your humerus and the socket of shoulder blade (scapula)

**Important to distinguish the difference because treatment and management are different.

Page 3: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Glenohumeral Joint

•Made up of 3 bones that connect in one place: humerus, scapula, clavicle

•Ball and socket joint, ball of the humerus fits into the glenoid cavity

•Labrum is the piece of cartilage that lies in between the head of humerus and glenoid

•Rotator Cuff muscles: supraspinatus, subscapularis, infraspinatus, teres minor

•Ligaments that help: coracohumeral ligament, 3 glenohumeral ligaments

Page 4: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

How Shoulder Dislocation Occurs

•Generally occurs after sports related injuries or a bad fall

•95% of cases humerus is pushed in front of the shoulder blade other 5% humerus is pushed behind shoulder blade

•Posterior dislocations frequently occur after seizures

Common in skateboarding, swimming, hockey, shoulder pressing (weightlifting)

Page 5: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Diagnosis

•Must be examined first and foremost to determine whether there is nerve or blood vessel damage

•X-ray used to determine the pattern of shoulder dislocation or fracture

Page 6: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Symptoms•Pain

•Arm held at side, forearm turned outward

•Loss of normal rounded deltoid muscle

•If there is nerve damage there can be feelings of pins and needles, numbness, or discoloration through the arm and hand

Page 7: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0owuTKCllZ8&feature=fvsr

Page 8: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Classifications4 types of classifications:

Anterior (most common)

Page 9: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Posterior

Page 10: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Inferior(very uncommon)

Page 11: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Subluxation

Page 12: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Treatment -Surgery or reduction-Shock therapy -Physiotherapy

Page 13: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Reduction

First: X-rays should be taken to rule out any fracturesReduction: A doctor puts the head of the humerus back into the joint*** You should not pop your own shoulder back in, it can cause severe damage

Page 14: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Surgery

-preferably done in open surgery under direct vision-a small scope is inserted in a tiny incision in the joint to view the extent of the injury (arthroscopic)-open surgery is used to repair the shoulder-full recovery takes several months

Page 15: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Tens Machine

-Does not repair the dislocation it just helps speed up the healing process -Sends electric currents through the muscles, loosening them up

Page 16: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Rehabilitation •Seeing a physiotherapist is recommended

•Strengthening and mobility exercises

•Taping the shoulder for extra support

** After shoulder dislocation you are more susceptible to re injure

Page 17: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Post Rehab Prevention• Continue flexibility and strengthening

exercises.• Taping the shoulder for support when

playing sports.• When starting off, do not go into full

contact sporting situations.• Have a daily routine to continue to

strengthen the shoulder.

Page 18: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

Prevention Strategies

• Balanced upper-body exercises:make sure that you are making your workouts balanced, working out different muscles around your shoulder.

• Take it easy: when starting to workout after coming back from a dislocated shoulder, take it slow, don't rush into heavy weights. Also, watch out for certain range of motions so that you do not aggravate your shoulder further.

• Sports-specific exercises: once you are cleared to play, you may want to start and focus on the range of motions that you use in your specific sport. Again, begin easy on your shoulder and then increase the difficulty.

• Plyometric exercises: working with medicine balls, and weight training is beneficial for two reasons; one- they are done fast, two-they work on shortening and lengthening your muscles.

Page 19: Shoulder Dislocation By Kristen, Erica and Taylor.

How to tape your shoulder

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MoWa1s56VNI