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Treatment of shoulder dislocation: is a sling appropriate?

George A C Murrell
Med J Aust 2003; 179 (7): 370-371. || doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2003.tb05596.x
Published online: 6 October 2003

Abstract

  • Acute anterior shoulder dislocations, when managed non-operatively, have traditionally been treated by placing the arm in a sling. There is no formal evidence that this treatment is of benefit.

  • Three recently reported studies, one in cadavers and two in patients, suggest that the detachment of the structures in the front of the shoulder is made worse when the shoulder is placed in internal rotation, as when the arm is in a sling. By contrast, the structures are realigned when the arm is placed in external rotation.

  • Shoulder dislocations, if managed non-operatively, should not be treated by placing arms in a sling. Rather, placing them in a splint or using a pillow so that the the arm is externally rotated should be considered.

For thousands of years, perhaps even before Hippocrates, dislocated shoulders have been treated by using a sling with the arm internally rotated. Although, and perhaps because, this same treatment has been used for so long, there is little information on its efficacy. A number of studies of non-operative treatment for anterior shoulder instability have been unable to show that any given treatment is better than another, and all have been unable to reduce the rate of recurrence.1 Surgery has provided better outcomes in terms of preventing recurrence of shoulder dislocations,2 and even for symptoms of instability. A recent randomised clinical trial involving 40 patients and comparing sling immobilisation with arthroscopic surgery in first-time shoulder dislocation showed a recurrence rate in the surgical group of 16% at 2 years versus 47% in the sling group.3 Patients in the sling group whose shoulders had not redislocated also had worse functional scores than those in the surgical group. In particular, they were less able to participate, and performed at lower levels of sport and recreational activities than patients in the surgical group.

One reason for the poor outcomes in the non-operative treatment of dislocated shoulders may lie in their patho-anatomy, and the inability of non-operative methods to correct the problem. The labrum constitutes the fibrocartilagenous rim of the glenoid and contributes to shoulder stability by elevating the glenoid edge and providing attachment of the glenohumeral ligaments. When the shoulder dislocates, the major damage is disruption of the labrum and capsule from the anterior glenoid — a Bankart lesion4 (see Box 1). Most surgical procedures aim to reattach the Bankart lesion to the fibrocartilagenous rim of the glenoid. It was thought that, when treated non-operatively, this lesion was less likely to heal back to bone,5 explaining why surgical reattachment has much better rates of success.6

Recently, two independent research groups, one in Japan7 and one in Australia,8 have shown, using magnetic resonance imaging in patients and load sensors in cadavers, that by putting the arm in internal rotation — the way it is normally positioned in a sling — the labral detachment is actually more pronounced (Box 1[a]). However, when the arm is placed in external rotation, the labrum becomes reapposed to the glenoid rim (Box 1[b]). The Japanese study involved magnetic resonance imaging of shoulders with recent dislocations that were placed in both internal and external rotation.7 The Bankart lesion was more marked (detached) when the patients’ arms were internally rotated, and became far less obvious when they were imaged in external rotation. The second study artificially created Bankart lesions in cadaver shoulders and measured the force transmitted to the glenoid rim in different arm positions.8 There was no contact force generated on the glenoid edge when the arm was internally rotated, and maximal force when placed in 45 degrees of external rotation, indicating that the torn-off labrum was reapposed best when the arm was externally rotated. These studies may explain why recurrence rates are so high when an arm with a dislocated shoulder is placed in a sling, as in this internally rotated position the torn off labrum is not reapposed to the glenoid bone and is thus unlikely to heal to it.

Most recently, Itoi et al have shown in a randomised clinical trial that patients immobilised in 10 degrees of external rotation (Box 2) for three weeks following anterior dislocation had a recurrence rate of 0/20 at 13–15 months, compared with 6/20 when immobilised in internal rotation.9,10 It will be important to extend this trial and perform similar trials in other centres. We are in the era of evidence-based medicine (including surgery) and this work indicates that it is appropriate to challenge long-standing concepts with the outcomes of randomised clinical trials.

Surgical stabilisation is still the “gold standard” for the treatment of recurrent shoulder instability.6 There are also good data for surgical stabilisation in first-time traumatic anterior dislocations for young athletic individuals.3,11 The new data suggest that if the shoulder is managed non-operatively there are no benefits in immobilising the shoulder in a sling, and that a preferable approach would be to not immobilise the shoulder at all. However, if it is decided to immobilise the shoulder after anterior shoulder dislocation it should be immobilised in a position of external rotation.

  • George A C Murrell

  • Orthopaedic Research Institute, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, St George Hospital, Kogarah, NSW.


Correspondence: 

Competing interests:

None identified.

  • 1. Hayes K, Callanan M, Walton J, et al. Shoulder instability — management and rehabilitation. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther 2002; 32: 497-509.
  • 2. Paxinos A, Walton J, Tzannes A, et al. Advances in the management of traumatic anterior and atraumatic multidirectional shoulder instability. Sports Med 2001; 31: 819-828.
  • 3. Kirkley A, Griffin S, Richards C, et al. Prospective randomized clinical trial comparing the effectiveness of immediate arthroscopic stabilization versus immobilization and rehabilitation in first traumatic anterior dislocations of the shoulder. Arthroscopy 1999; 15: 507-514.
  • 4. Bankart ASB. The pathology and treatment of recurrent dislocation of the shoulder-joint. BMJ 1938; 26: 23-29.
  • 5. Warner JJ, Miller MD, Marks P, Fu FH. Arthroscopic Bankart repair with the Suretac device. Part I: Clinical observations. Arthroscopy 1995; 11: 2-13.
  • 6. Walton J, Paxinos A, Tzannes A, et al. The unstable shoulder in the adolescent athlete. Am J Sports Med 2002; 30: 758-767.
  • 7. Itoi E, Sashi R, Minagawa H, et al. Position of immobilization after dislocation of the glenohumeral joint. A study with use of magnetic resonance imaging. J Bone Joint Surg Am 2001; 83-A(5): 661-667.
  • 8. Hatrick C, O'Leary S, Miller B, et al. Should acute anterior dislocation of the shoulder be treated in external rotation. Transactions of the 48th Annual Meeting of the Orthopaedic Research Society. Dallas, Texas; 2002. Available at: www.ors.org/Transactions/48/0830.PDF (accessed Aug 2003).
  • 9. Itoi E, Hatakeyama Y, Kido T, et al. A new method of immobilization after dislocation of the shoulder: a prospective randomized study. 70th Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons; 2003 Feb 5-9; New Orleans, La. Available at: www.aaos.org/wordhtml/anmt2003/sciprog/200.htm (accessed Aug 2003).
  • 10. Itoi E, Hatakeyama Y, Kido T, et al. A new method of immobilization after traumatic anterior dislocation of the shoulder: a preliminary study. J Shoulder Elbow Surg 2003. In press.
  • 11. Bottoni CR, Wilckens JH, DeBerardino TM, et al. A prospective, randomized evaluation of arthroscopic stabilization versus nonoperative treatment in patients with acute, traumatic, first-time shoulder dislocations. Am J Sports Med 2002; 30: 576-580.

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