Skip to content

October 6, 2010

18

Dislocating Shoulder: Arthroscopic Repair Dr. Alan Reznik

A 25 year old athlete has a shoulder that dislocates in both anterior and inferior directions, or what is known as “multidirectional” instability. The shoulder was unstable with overhead activity and slipped out of place with putting a jacket or with rolling over in bed while asleep. Dr. Reznik demonstrates an exam under anesthesia before the repair, the arthroscopic repair of the ligaments and tightening the capsule and then, an exam under anesthesia after the repair showing the problem corrected. The video highlights the special instruments required to preform the minimally invasive surgery.

Incoming search terms:

18 Comments Post a comment
  1. DrAReznik
    Oct 6 2010

    @registeredme – Your history is so convincing. Sometimes a plain MRI will not show the problem when an MRI arthrogram will (liquid injected into the shoulder joint to show the ligaments better). If this is not possible and exam under anesthesia and a diagnostic scope may be needed. Other factors are your age and general laxity of multiple joints. That could explain the non-operative treatment. But if these are not issues than repair sounds like a good idea. Best of luck.

    Reply
  2. registeredme
    Oct 7 2010

    I have been to the local orthopedic clinic here in Germany. I told him about this regular dislocation i have everytime i play rugby,and pretty much limited my physical activities outside sport. After doing the MRI scan,he told me that my shoulder is fine and after a long time,i can achieve back the stability of my shoulder. But i strongly disagree to that,and pretty much unsatisfied by his diagnostic. I even dislocated once while removing my jacket! and it has been reoccuring more than a year!

    Reply
  3. DrAReznik
    Oct 7 2010

    @daleflaherty most shoulder regain 80% improvement by 4 months, full use can take up to a year. Full punching (really depends on your definition of punching). In general light work outs (I mean light) can start at four months provided you do well with a good therapy program first and your MD gives you the OK.

    Reply
  4. daleflaherty
    Oct 7 2010

    I have had a operation on my shoulder 8 weeks ago not for the Arthroscopic blanket repair, ever since I had a car crash my shoulder would pop out for the fun of It! If I went swimming it would pop and also every time I had a full contact kickboxing fight it would pop out. I went to the hospital every time it popped.I had put it back in myself but created enough evidence to have it looked at and eventually repair, My only question is will I be able to go back to punching correctly after 6 month?

    Reply
  5. DrAReznik
    Oct 7 2010

    to learn more see my book on LULU.com/spotlight/rezex
    “The Knee and Shoulder Handbook for all of us”

    Reply
  6. DrAReznik
    Oct 7 2010

    these are common complaints in an athletic person with recurrent dislocations. The main concern is the damage recurrent dislocations does to the ball of the ball and socket joint. With time and recurrence the edge of the socket wears down and the ball develops a dent or defect. The “Hill Sachs” lesion and edge wear makes the shoulder even more unstable. Worse repair in patients with large defects is less reliable and other approaches are required. Having it fixed is your best option.

    Reply
  7. wearethesame
    Oct 7 2010

    I’ve been extremely athletic for years (Karate, aikido, jujitsu) until I dislocated my shoulder 2 years ago. Since then, it dislocates an average of once every 2 weeks. I obviously can’t compete in sports anymore and it’s driving me crazy. If I get this surgery, is there hope for me to compete again?

    Reply
  8. ab110795
    Oct 7 2010

    Cool

    Reply
  9. mcb630
    Oct 7 2010

    okay, im 16 and i have chronic dislocations, they can happen hundreds of times a day, it just depends on what im doing, and how its feeling. I’m having a surgery really similar to this one but im not sure how sore/ immobile that will make me, becasue mine is multiple directional, so it ahs to be tightened all the way around

    Reply
  10. DrAReznik
    Oct 7 2010

    I have had a number of patients with this issue and the majority have done well with a repair.

    Reply
  11. revelinabandon
    Oct 7 2010

    I am a 39 yr old male with a history of dislocation in my left shoulder. The original injury occured when I fell full on it during a soccer match. No hands. Ever since it’s been weak and threatened dislocation during overhead lifting, forward pushing, and even rolled out of the socket from a relaxed position while laying on my back in a waterbed.
    I’m youthful, but this is an old injury that’s recurred dozens of times over 22 years. What are my chances of solid repair?

    Reply
  12. DrAReznik
    Oct 7 2010

    Groin pulls have nothing to do with shoulder injuries and are completely different in nature. In general they take a long time to heal. Occasionally they represent a fracture of the insertion site of the tendon. This needs to be checked by your Orthopedic surgeon.

    Reply
  13. matt31602
    Oct 7 2010

    @chaunceydavis528 if i were you i would get that fixed i just had mine fixed and it so much better i have no worries in favoring in my arm…

    Reply
  14. chaunceydavis528
    Oct 7 2010

    I’ve had 13 dislocations between the age range of 18 – 22. In the back of my mind there is always the possibility of the next dislocation – until that happens, I’ll continue to try non-surgical methods. I’m 30 yr old now and Its been almost 9 years since my last dislocation…….if I have another dislocation – I’ll definitely have surgery.

    Reply
  15. chaunceydavis528
    Oct 7 2010

    I probably need this surgery too. I’ve had a total of 13 dislocations with my left shoulder – after the 2nd dislocation – I’ve managed to put the shoulder back in the socket by twisting my arm counter clockwise. Most of my dislocations happened as a result of playing basketball. I’m not as active as I used to be and part of it may have to do we fear of suffering another dislocation……From time to time I perform shoulder strengthening exercised hoping this will provide the “cure”,

    Reply
  16. davespark10
    Oct 7 2010

    i just pulled/ or ripped my groin, its hurts so bad im looking for things that might make it feel better… you guys have any ideas?

    Reply
  17. surgicalgown
    Oct 7 2010

    Great video. Thank you for loading.

    Reply
  18. missmarplefan
    Oct 7 2010

    can this be done for hip joint

    Reply

Share your thoughts, post a comment.

(required)
(required)

Note: HTML is allowed. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to comments