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Voluntary Dislocation of the Shoulder
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Voluntary Dislocation of the Shoulder
Voluntary Dislocation of the Shoulder
CR
Carter R. Rowe
Carter R. Rowe
DP
Donald S. Pierce
Donald S. Pierce
JC
John G. Clark
John G. Clark
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1 April 1973
journal article
Published by
Wolters Kluwer Health
in
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery
Vol. 55
(3)
,
445-460
https://doi.org/10.2106/00004623-197355030-00001
Abstract
St patients responded well to muscle-strengthening exercises, that patients with significant psychiatric problems did poorly after all types of surgical and non-operative treatment unless their psychiatric problem had been resolved, and that if surgical treatment was undertaken, a combination of procedures was necessary rather than one of the standard operations. Clinical, roentgenographic, electromyographic, and psychiatric studies of twenty-six patients with voluntary dislocation of one or both shoulders revealed that dislocation was produced by suppression of one element of one of the muscle force-couples responsible for normal shoulder motion, that most patients responded well to muscle-strengthening exercises, that patients with significant psychiatric problems did poorly after all types of surgical and non-operative treatment unless their psychiatric problem had been resolved, and that if surgical treatment was undertaken, a combination of procedures was necessary rather than one of the standard operations. Copyright © 1973 by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated...
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Cited by 175 articles