I dislocated the right shoulder on my 54 year old body last saturday, ouch! (I was walking the dog in the wood, tripped, fell forward, and shoulder dislocated as I tried to catch my fall.)
Been to sports med specialist docs, had x-rays and MRIs, seeing shoulder surgery specialist this morning.
Googled around, it looks like pretty certain that once you dislocate it once, it's much more likely to happen again.
I think I'd go crazy if I have to constantly wonder if my arm is going to snap out- so I'm probably going to do the surgery.
Any other thoughts, expert opinions, or personal experiences?
P.S. For any docs viewing, here are the ugly details from the MRI:
1) Nondisplaced Hill-Sachs fracture of the humeral head. Bony GLAD-type anteroinferior labral tear. The findings are consistent with anterior dislocation-relocation injury.
2) Chronic degenerative labral tear from anterosuperior to posteroinferior.
3) Moderate joint effusion.
4) Mild hypertropic tendinopathy of the biceps long head tendon.
5) Myofascial edema along the scapula extending medially beyond the field of view, if medial scalpular fracture is a possibility, consider CT.
Been to sports med specialist docs, had x-rays and MRIs, seeing shoulder surgery specialist this morning.
Googled around, it looks like pretty certain that once you dislocate it once, it's much more likely to happen again.
I think I'd go crazy if I have to constantly wonder if my arm is going to snap out- so I'm probably going to do the surgery.
Any other thoughts, expert opinions, or personal experiences?
P.S. For any docs viewing, here are the ugly details from the MRI:
1) Nondisplaced Hill-Sachs fracture of the humeral head. Bony GLAD-type anteroinferior labral tear. The findings are consistent with anterior dislocation-relocation injury.
2) Chronic degenerative labral tear from anterosuperior to posteroinferior.
3) Moderate joint effusion.
4) Mild hypertropic tendinopathy of the biceps long head tendon.
5) Myofascial edema along the scapula extending medially beyond the field of view, if medial scalpular fracture is a possibility, consider CT.