PMID: 3752356May 1, 1986Paper

Operative treatment of posterior shoulder dislocations by posterior glenoidplasty, capsulorrhaphy, and infraspinatus advancement

The American Journal of Sports Medicine
A Hernandez, D Drez

Abstract

Posterior dislocations of the shoulder are rare, comprising only 4% of shoulder dislocations. Several operative procedures have been described in treating recurrent dislocations, and results have been varied. A retrospective review of eight shoulders in eight patients treated by posterior glenoidplasty with capsulorrhaphy and infraspinatus advancement revealed generally good results. Followup ranged from 10 to 114 months, with an average of 36 months. Seven patients were classified as recurrent traumatic dislocators and one as a recurrent atraumatic voluntary dislocator. Results graded as good, fair, and failure were based on pain, range of motion, return to activities, recurrence, and roentgenograms. Six patients had good results with return to full activity, full range of motion, no pain, no recurrence, and no degenerative changes of roentgenograms. One patient, who has not returned to athletic activities and has occasional pain and limited range of motion, was graded as a fair result. The patient classified as an atraumatic voluntary dislocator has occasional feelings of instability and slight pain with strenuous activity, but has not had a recurrence and has no difficulty with activities of daily living. She was also classi...Continue Reading

References

May 1, 1981·The American Journal of Sports Medicine·J E TiboneL A Yocum

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Citations

Jul 2, 1999·Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery·M H MetcalfF A Matsen
Feb 19, 2013·Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery·Peter N ChalmersAnthony A Romeo
May 26, 2010·The Orthopedic Clinics of North America·James P Bradley, Sam G Tejwani
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Feb 27, 2004·The Orthopedic Clinics of North America·Julie Y Bishop, Evan L Flatow

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