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Joint Dislocations: Shoulder, Elbow, Hip, Patella and Ankle

Defence Medical Services. Clinical Guidelines for Operations: Joint Dislocations. Last revised: May 2026.

Joint Dislocations: Shoulder, Elbow, Hip, Patella and Ankle

Joint dislocation refers to complete displacement of the articulating bones within a joint, resulting in loss of normal joint alignment.

Shared findings / general concept:

  • General presentation
    • Significant pain (esp. on joint movement)
    • Refusal / inability to move the joint
    • Characteristic joint position / deformity (see below)
    • Joint tenderness and swelling
  • Initial assessment
    • Neurovascular assessment
    • Assess the joint above and below (as associated fractures are common)
  • Management principle: reduction → immobilisation → monitoring

This article focuses on selected high-yield closed joint dislocations relevant to the UKMLA and day-to-day clinical practice.

Shoulder Dislocation

Types and Causes

[Ref]

Dislocation type Causes / mechanisms
Anterior shoulder dislocation (90-95% cases)
  • Blow to the arm while the arm is abducted, externally rotated and extended
  • FOOSH
  • Force directed at the posterior humerus

Strong forces required to displace the shoulder usually result from contact sport injuriesmotor vehicle accidents, and severe falls

Posterior shoulder dislocation Causes of violent involuntary muscle contraction, such as:

  • Seizures
  • Electrocution

Direct blow to the anterior shoulder combined with axial loading while the arm is adducted and internally rotated

Risk Factors

[Ref]

  • Prior dislocations – major risk factor
    • Previous dislocation may tear the glenoid labrum, stretch or tear the joint capsule and surrounding ligaments (esp. the anterior glenohumeral ligament for anterior shoulder dislocations), which makes the joint more prone to dislocate
  • Younger patients (due to generally higher activity levels)
  • Shallow glenoid fossa
  • Associated shoulder injuries (e.g. rotator cuff tears, glenoid fracture)

Clinical Features

[Ref]

Dislocation type Clinical presentation
Anterior shoulder dislocation (most common)
  • Arm held slightly abductedexternally rotated
  • Loss of the shoulder contour
    • Shoulder appears flattened or squared-off
    • Prominent acromion

In thin patients, a prominent humeral head may be palpable anteriorly, just below the coracoid process

Posterior shoulder dislocation
  • Arm held slightly adducted + internally rotated
  • Prominent coracoid process
  • Humeral head not palpable anteriorly

In thin patients, a prominent humeral head may be palpable posteriorly

Associated Injuries / Complications

Hill-Sachs lesion: compression / depression fracture of the posterolateral humeral head

Bankart lesion: injury to the glenoid labrum

  • Soft Bankart lesion (more common): labral tear without associated fracture
  • Bony Bankart lesion: labral tear with an avulsion fracture of the glenoid rim

Assessment and Management

Step 1 Clinical assessment

  • Importantly check for axillary nerve injury
  • Check for radial, ulnar, and median nerve injury
  • Check axillary artery (palpate the brachial pulses, other distal pulses and CRT)

Pre-reduction imaging with X-ray (to help confirm the dislocation and exclude associated fractures)

If there is an associated humeral neck fracture, do NOT perform reduction in the emergency department as it can lead to avascular necrosis. [Ref]

Step 2 Provide adequate analgesia and perform reduction:

  • Anterior shoulder dislocation reduction method: traction-countertraction method (NB many other reduction methods exist)
  • Posterior shoulder dislocation reduction method: supine, traction, internal rotation

After successful reduction → immobilise the arm with a sling

  • Movement of the joints below (i.e. elbow, wrist, and hand) should be encouraged
Step 3 Perform post-reduction assessment

  • Clinically assess for neurovascular status
  • Perform post-reduction imaging (X-ray) to confirm the successful reduction and check for any fractures

X-Ray Findings

Dislocation type Radiographic findings
Anterior shoulder dislocation The humeral head is typically displaced anteriorly and inferomedially

Associated injuries such as Hill-Sachs and Bankart lesions should also be assessed for

Posterior shoulder dislocation Posterior dislocation may be subtle on AP X-ray. Typical findings include:

  • Lightbulb sign – the humeral head appears rounded (like a lightbulb) due to fixed internal rotation
  • Empty glenoid appearance
  • Humeral head displaced posterior to the glenoid (on axillary or scapular Y view)

Elbow Dislocation

Section Content
Type Posterior elbow dislocation is the most common type

This involves posterior displacement of the ulna and radius relative to the humerus

Causes Elbow dislocation usually occurs following high-energy trauma or sporting injury

A common mechanism is FOOSH

Clinical features
  • Severe elbow pain and swelling
  • Elbow held in flexion
  • Reduced ROM
  • Loss of normal elbow contour + prominent olecranon
Terrible triad injury Triad of:

  • Elbow dislocation
  • Radial head fracture
  • Coronoid process fracture

This is an unstable fracture-dislocation and often requires surgical management

Assessment Assess neurovascular status; important structures to assess include:

  • Median, ulnar, radial nerves
  • Brachial artery

1st line investigation: X-ray

Management
  • Adequate analgesia +/- sedation
  • Closed reduction followed by immobilisation (usually an above-elbow backslap with the elbow flexed ~90 degrees)
  • Perform post-reduction X-ray and neurovascular assessment

As a general rule, dislocation with ANY of the following would require urgent orthopaedic evaluation +/- operative management:

  • Neurovascular compromise
  • Open injury
  • Associated fracture
  • Failed closed reduction or post-reduction instability

Hip Dislocation

[Ref]

Section Content
Type Posterior dislocation is most common (~90% cases)

  • Due to the stronger anterior ligaments of the hip (e.g. iliofemoral and pubofemoral ligaments)

Anterior dislocation is less common

Causes Usually caused by high-energy trauma

  • Classic mechanisms: dashboard injury (happens in a front-on road traffic collision when the patient is sitting with the hip flexed and knee flexed, and the knee hits the dashboard – driving a posterior force into the flexed hip)
  • Fall from height
  • Major sporting trauma

It may also occur in patients with a prosthetic hip replacement, where lower-energy mechanisms (e.g. reaching the extremes of prosthetic joint ROM) can sometimes cause dislocation.

Clinical features Typical symptoms:

  • Severe hip / groin pain
  • Inability to weight bear
  • Reduced ROM
  • Some patients may describe a sudden pop / giving-way sensation, especially in prosthetic hip dislocation

Lower limb deformity / appearance depends on the type of dislocation:

  • Posterior hip dislocation (more common) = shortened + internally rotated + adducted lower limb
  • Anterior hip dislocation = externally rotated + abducted lower limb (with no obvious shortening or even lengthening)
Complications Key complications include:

  • Avascular necrosis of the femoral head
  • Sciatic nerve injury (in posterior hip dislocations) or femoral neurovascular bundle injury (in anterior hip dislocations)
Assessment Assess neurovascular status (sciatic nerve in posterior dislocations)

1st line investigation: X-ray

Management Reduction must be performed within 6 hours to prevent permanent complications like AVN

  • Provide sedation to relax muscles and prevent fractures during reduction
  • Closed reduction
  • Post-reduction care
    • Balance of guarded mobilisation and immobilisation
    • Perform post-reduction X-ray and neurovascular assessment

As a general rule, dislocation with ANY of the following would require urgent orthopaedic evaluation +/- operative management:

  • Neurovascular compromise
  • Open injury
  • Associated fracture
  • Failed closed reduction or post-reduction instability

Patella Dislocation

Common causes / mechanisms (common during sports):

  • Twisting injury
  • Sudden change in direction
  • Direct blow to the medial side of the patella

Clinical presentation:

  • Lateral dislocation of the patella is most common (→ lateral prominence)
  • The knee would be held in flexion

Assessment and management:

  • Neurovascular status assessment
  • Patella dislocations commonly reduce spontaneously
  • If dislocated on presentation
    • Closed reduction
    • Encourage unrestricted weight-bearing
    • Splints that permit full knee flexion may be used for pain relief

Ankle Dislocation

Ankle dislocation rarely occurs in isolation, most occur with concurrent ankle fracture (fracture-dislocation)

See the Ankle Fracture article for more information.

References

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