Iniciar sesión

Intra-articular Shoulder Injection for Reduction Following Shoulder Dislocation

Visión general

Source: Rachel Liu, BAO, MBBCh, Emergency Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA

The anterior shoulder dislocation is one of the most common joint dislocations seen in emergency settings. In anterior shoulder dislocation, the humeral head is displaced out of the glenohumeral joint in front of the scapular glenoid, resulting in a loss of the articulation between the arm and the rest of the shoulder. This can be caused by a fall onto an abducted, extended, and externally rotated arm, such as in a bicycle or running accident. Sometimes anterior shoulder dislocation can be due to a minor trauma or even result from rolling over in bed with an externally rotated and stretched overhead arm.

Anterior shoulder dislocation is a painful injury. Patients cannot actively abduct, adduct or internally rotate the shoulder. Reduction of the shoulder is the best form of analgesia and, of course, is necessary to restore arm function. While it is current practice for patients to undergo procedural sedation during the shoulder reduction procedure, the sedatives have serious side effects (cardiac and respiratory depression), and require long stays in the emergency department (ED), dedicated nursing staff, multiple radiographs, and consulting services.

Intra-articular injection with a local anesthetic, such as lidocaine, offers significant pain relief in patients with shoulder dislocations and during the reduction procedure. It is a technically simple procedure that doesn't require long ED stays or significant hospital resources. The success of the intra-articular anesthesia can be enhanced further by performing the procedure under the guidance of bedside ultrasound, which allows real-time visualization of the needle tip reaching the appropriate area.

Procedimiento

1. Physical Exam Findings

  1. On general inspection, observe the patient for the loss of shoulder contour and flattened shoulder definition compared with the unaffected side. This occurs because the humeral head is no longer beneath the deltoid. Notice if the patient rests with the arm held in slight abduction and external rotation, supporting the arm with the uninjured hand. These are signs of an anterior dislocation.
  2. Palpate the radial pulse. Although injury to the axillary artery is rare from a dislo

Log in or to access full content. Learn more about your institution’s access to JoVE content here

Aplicación y resumen

For shoulder dislocation, intra-articular injection of lidocaine as analgesia (and subsequent reduction) avoids the cardiopulmonary depression and side effects associated with procedural sedation. Intra-articular injection of lidocaine is a safe procedure since the administrated dosages are below the levels that cause cardiotoxicity. In addition, the direct injection into the joint space decreases the risk of systemic infection, and the risk of septic arthritis is mitigated by sterile precautions.

Log in or to access full content. Learn more about your institution’s access to JoVE content here

Tags
Intra articular Shoulder InjectionReductionShoulder DislocationLocal AnestheticPain ReliefHumerusScapulaAbductionAdductionInternal RotationAnalgesiaArm FunctionSedationUltrasound GuidanceTypes Of Shoulder DislocationAnterior Shoulder DislocationPosterior Shoulder DislocationInferior Shoulder Dislocation Subcoracoid Anterior Shoulder Dislocation

Saltar a...

0:00

Overview

1:03

Types and Etiology of Shoulder Dislocation

2:11

Procedure without Ultrasound

4:52

Procedure using Ultrasound Guidance

7:07

Complications

8:01

Summary

Vídeos de esta colección:

article

Now Playing

Intra-articular Shoulder Injection for Reduction Following Shoulder Dislocation

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

29.1K Vistas

article

Basic Life Support: Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Defibrillation

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

36.5K Vistas

article

Basic Life Support Part II: Airway/Breathing and Continued Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

25.2K Vistas

article

Pericardiocentesis

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

26.8K Vistas

article

Lateral Canthotomy and Inferior Cantholysis

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

21.5K Vistas

article

Percutaneous Cricothyrotomy

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

17.1K Vistas

article

Open Cricothyrotomy

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

19.1K Vistas

article

Needle Thoracostomy

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

57.3K Vistas

article

Tube Thoracostomy

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

23.2K Vistas

article

Arterial Line Placement

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

59.6K Vistas

article

Intraosseous Needle Placement

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

33.0K Vistas

article

Peripheral Venous Cannulation

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

19.4K Vistas

article

Central Venous Catheter Insertion: Internal Jugular

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

42.3K Vistas

article

Central Venous Catheter Insertion: Femoral Vein

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

44.7K Vistas

article

Central Venous Catheter Insertion: Subclavian Vein

Emergency Medicine and Critical Care

45.0K Vistas

JoVE Logo

Privacidad

Condiciones de uso

Políticas

Investigación

Educación

ACERCA DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Todos los derechos reservados