The case of a 79-year-old patient with a spontaneous bilateral posterior fracture-dislocation
is presented. There was no evident history of trauma or previous convulsive seizure.
The only explanation for the spontaneous bilateral posterior dislocation of the shoulder
was the anamnestic notion of a transient global amnesia. In patients with bilateral
non-traumatic shoulder pain a posterior dislocation should be suspected, even in the
absence of convulsion or electric shock injury.
Transient global amnesia - ”reverse” Hill-Sachs lesion - modified McLaughlin procedure
- custom-made orthesis