Sports Medicine: Just the Facts

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CHAPTER 44 • SHOULDER INSTABILITY 263

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44 SHOULDER INSTABILITY


Robert A Arciero

CLASSIFICATION



  • Instability of the shoulder is a common problem.
    There is no report of incidence because of the large
    range in variability of presentation. There are three
    basic categories of instability. Instability should be
    considered as a spectrum of pathology: unidirectional


traumatic instability on one end of the spectrum,
acquired instability and atraumatic multidirectional
instability at the other end. (Thomas and Matsen,
1989)

A. TRAUMATIC


  • Anterior: Fall with the arm in an abducted and exter-
    nally rotated position or an anterior force with the arm
    in abduction and external rotation (arm tackling in
    football, falling while snow skiing).

  • Posterior: Posterior directed force with the arm for-
    ward elevated and adducted (MVA or pass blocking in
    football). Grand mal seizure or electrical shock can
    also produce a traumatic posterior dislocation.


B. ACQUIRED


  • Microinstability: Subtle instability associated with
    pain in a throwing athlete or associated with rotator
    cuff tendinosis/dysfunction. This instability can occur
    from repetitive stretching of shoulder ligaments from
    activity or sports requirements.


C. ATRAUMATIC

•Multidirectional: These patients have symptomatic
glenohumeral subluxation or dislocations in more
than one direction. Many patients will present with
severe pain as an initial complaint and not overt insta-
bility. For treatment purposes it is important to differ-
entiate by patient history and physical examination
the primary direction of instability.


  1. Primary Anterior: Pain associated with the arm in
    an abducted, externally rotated position

  2. Primary Posterior: Pain with pushing open a heavy
    door

  3. Primary Inferior: Pain associated with carrying
    heavy objects at the side



  • Shoulder instability can be further classified:



  1. Degree of Instability: Dislocation, subluxation,
    apprehension
    2.Chronology of Instability: Congenital, acute,
    chronic, recurrent

  2. Direction of Instability: Anterior, posterior, infe-
    rior, superior

  3. Laxity is not Instability: Laxity refers to translation
    of the humerus within the glenoid fossa. Many
    individuals are extremely lax but are asympto-
    matic. Instability refers to the symptomatic com-
    plaint of instability and dysfunction.

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