Trauma symposium - dislocations Flashcards

1
Q

Define:

a) Dislocation
b) Subluxation

A

a) Dislocation - complete joint disruption - bone fully out of joint space
b) Subluxation - partial dislocation - bone not fully out of joint

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2
Q

Give an overview of how dislocations are diagnosed?

What else is looked for/assessed when investigating a dislocation?

A

Clinical & radiological diagnosis

Look for associated injuries (pre-op & post-op):

  • ass. fractures
  • neurovascular damage (eg axillary nerve in shoulder)
  • soft tissue damage
  • other MSK damage
  • damage to other systems
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3
Q

Give the common directions of dislocation - and appearance of:

shoulder dislocations

A

Anterior (90%)

Posterior (9%)

Inferior (1%)

Anterior dislocation - Squared off & locked in internal rotation

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4
Q

Give the common directions of dislocation - and appearance of:

elbow dislocations

A

Posterior

Olecranon very prominent posteriorly

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5
Q

Give the common directions of dislocation - and appearance of:

hip dislocations

A

Posterior

Affected leg is:

  • shortened
  • internally rotated
  • adducted
  • flexed

Anterior is rare - and confers near enough the opposite appearance

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6
Q

What does this radiograph show

A

Anterior dislocation of the right shoulder

Note that in anterior dislocations it also goes quite inferior

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7
Q

What causes anterior dislocations of the shoulder?

A

Abduction, extension and/or external rotation

Common in sports following falls on an outstretched hands or sudden pulling of the shoulder

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8
Q

What causes posterior dislocations of the shoulder?

A

Electrocutions

Generalised tonic-clonic seizures (aka grand-mal)

Hypoglycaemic fits

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9
Q

Give the common directions of dislocation - and appearance of:

knee dislocations

A

Posterior*

Loss of normal contour & extended

*lecture says anteroposteriorly but who knows what that means

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10
Q

What does this radiograph show?

A

Posterior dislocation of the shoulder

‘light bulb appearance’

(the right image is normal though)

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11
Q

Posterior dislocations are sometimes pretty hard to see clinically - as the shoulder looks pretty normal (as it does on a radiograph too)

What feature on shoulder examination would indicate posterior dislocation of the shoulder?

A

External rotation is a big no no

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12
Q

What nerves are at risk in elbow dislocations?

A

Ulnar nerve

Radial nerve

Median nerve

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13
Q

What are causes of hip dislocations?

A

Falls from height (elderly)

RTAs (yungers)

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14
Q

Why is management of a dislocation of the knee different from that of other joints?

A

When knee dislocates - there is damage to both cruciates, medial and lateral ligaments - so if reduced, the bone will not stay in place

Knee dislocations are reduced and then fixed in place - before surgery to repair these ligaments is carried out

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15
Q

Give the common directions of dislocation - and appearance of:

ankle dislocations

A

Lateral (most common)

Foot is externally rotated with prominent medial malleolus

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16
Q
A