• Acta Orthop Belg · Dec 2004

    Case Reports

    Combined anterior and posterior shoulder dislocation as a manifestation of a brain tumour.

    • Ioannis Tsionos, Theophilos Karahalios, Aristeidis H Zibis, and Konstantinos N Malizos.
    • Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Academic Hospital of the University of Thessalia, Larisa, Greece. jtsionos@yahoo.com
    • Acta Orthop Belg. 2004 Dec 1;70(6):612-5.

    AbstractSeizures are sometimes the first manifestation of a brain tumour. They may give rise to shoulder fractures or fracture-dislocations. When bilateral, these lesions tend to be symmetrical. The patient reported here suffered from a previously undiagnosed brain tumour, the first manifestation of which were seizures, which provoked a bilateral shoulder dislocation in opposite directions. The posterior dislocation was recognized with a delay of 16 days. After an episode of seizures, shoulder dislocation can occur in either direction, and bilateral shoulder dislocations may not be symmetrical.

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