Right now, lie on your back and have someone slowly raise your arm out to the side and twist the hand back behind your head. If the shoulder feels like it is about to slip, that is the apprehension sign. Positive apprehension at end-range plus a discrete dislocation event in the past is enough to book an in-person assessment.
Your shoulder is a golf ball sitting on a tee — the soft cartilage rim around the tee is what holds the ball in place. A first dislocation rips that rim off the bone. The body cannot reliably grow that rim back through exercise alone. Each subsequent dislocation also chips a small piece off both the ball and the tee, so the joint gets less stable, not more, with every event you let happen.
If any of these are present, do not start a rehab program — get assessed in person, fast.
Refer to: A&E for acute neurovascular compromise or irreducible dislocation. Orthopaedic shoulder surgeon for surgical candidacy, recurrent dislocations, or bone-loss assessment. Neurology for persistent nerve deficit.
Right now, lie on your back and have someone slowly raise your arm out to the side and twist the hand back behind your head. If the shoulder feels like it is about to slip, that is the apprehension sign. A positive apprehension at end-range plus a clear traumatic dislocation in the past is enough to book an in-person assessment this week.
If your shoulder has popped out once, the choice you make in the next six weeks probably decides whether it ever pops out again.
Your shoulder is a golf ball sitting on a tee, and the soft cartilage rim around the tee is what holds the ball in place. A first dislocation rips that rim off the bone. The body cannot reliably grow that rim back through exercise alone. Each subsequent dislocation also chips a small piece off both the ball and the tee, so the joint actually gets less stable, not more, with every event you let happen.
What would change this: A multi-center RCT (N≥400, age 18–30 contact athletes, first-time dislocators) with a standardized, dosed conservative rehab arm vs early arthroscopic Bankart, primary endpoint 5-year recurrence + glenohumeral OA on imaging, secondary endpoints including TSK and SI-RSI. Until that exists, early surgery for young contact athletes and conservative-first for older low-demand patients remains the appropriate stratification.
Surgical stabilization superior to conservative for young (<25) contact athletes: HIGH — five SR/MAs concordant, RR ~0.20–0.25, BESS/BOA Patient Care Pathway.
ER vs IR sling immobilization equivalence: HIGH — Zhang 2020 SR/MA of RCTs N=1042.
Recurrence drives bone loss and OA progression: HIGH — Rutgers 2022 SR; Verweij 2021 SR N=1832.
Critical bone-loss threshold ~13.5–20% for Latarjet over Bankart: MODERATE — international consensus; primary data variable.
Conservative management appropriate for >30 yo low-demand: MODERATE — pooled data thinner; based on lower baseline recurrence risk.
Specific conservative-rehab dosing (sets/reps/load by phase): LOW — DATA UNAVAILABLE in most RCTs.
Apprehension+relocation+surprise cluster diagnostic accuracy: MODERATE-HIGH — consistent across Provencher 2021 review and primary cohort data.
Criteria-based RTP reduces recurrence vs time-based: MODERATE — Kelley 2022 cohort, not RCT-validated head-to-head.
Psychological factors substantially affect RTS: HIGH — Velasquez Garcia 2023 SR/MA N=1093.
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Subscribe FreeThe shoulder is a shallow socket (the glenoid) holding a large ball (the humeral head). Stability comes from a fibrocartilage rim called the labrum, the inferior glenohumeral ligament complex, the joint capsule, and dynamic muscle control from the rotator cuff and scapular stabilizers.
A traumatic anterior dislocation forces the humeral head forward and downward off the glenoid. This typically tears the front-lower part of the labrum off the bone (a Bankart lesion, present in 80–100% of first-time MR arthrography findings) and impacts the back of the humeral head against the front of the glenoid rim, creating a divot (a Hill-Sachs lesion, present in 65–93%). With each subsequent dislocation, more bone is lost from both surfaces — the structural problem grows worse with every event.
Once the labrum is detached and the capsule stretched, the dynamic stabilizers alone cannot reliably prevent the joint from slipping again under abduction–external rotation loading. This is why first-time dislocations in young, high-demand patients have such high recurrence rates without surgical repair.
Typical presentation: "My shoulder came out — it popped back in, but ever since, when I try to throw or reach behind my head, it feels like it's about to slip again."
No single physical test rules in or out anterior instability with confidence. Use the apprehension–relocation–surprise cluster as the clinical battery; suspicious positive cluster with mechanism-consistent history → MR arthrography → 3D CT only if surgical planning needs bone-loss quantification.
| Test | Sensitivity | Specificity | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apprehension test | 53–72% | 96–99% | Provencher 2021 |
| Relocation test | 30–81% | 54–92% | Provencher 2021 |
| Surprise / Anterior Release | 64–92% | 89–99% | Provencher 2021 |
| 3-test cluster (all positive) | — | ~97–99% (PPV ~93–94%) | Provencher 2021 |
| MR arthrography (labral lesions) | 88–93% | 94–98% | Provencher 2021 |
Imaging trigger: Order MR arthrography only when surgery is on the table; reserve 3D CT for glenoid bone-loss quantification approaching the critical threshold (~13.5–20%).
Older view → Pre-2010 orthopaedic / primary-care guidance
Conservative management is the default first-line for first-time anterior dislocation in all populations.
Recent evidence → Hurley 2020, Belk 2023, Alkhatib 2022, Hu 2023, Abdel Khalik 2024 SR/MAs; BESS/BOA Patient Care Pathway
Early arthroscopic Bankart repair is first-line for young (<25), contact-sport, high-demand first-time dislocators — approximately 4-fold recurrence reduction.
Older view → Internal-rotation sling for 3–4 weeks reduces recurrence; Itoi early RCT favored ER bracing
Sling position determines recurrence risk.
Recent evidence → Zhang 2020 SR/MA of RCTs (N=1042)
No significant difference in recurrence between ER and IR immobilization. Choose by patient comfort and compliance — ER bracing has high real-world non-compliance.
Older view → Conservative management produces equivalent long-term joint outcomes to surgery
Surgery is purely an option for those wanting fastest functional return.
Recent evidence → Verweij 2021 SR/MA (N=1832)
Post-dislocation osteoarthritis prevalence is driven by recurrence count, not by surgery itself. Reducing recurrences protects the joint long-term.
Older view → Time-based return to play at 4–6 months post-stabilization
Calendar time governs RTS clearance.
Recent evidence → Kelley 2022 cohort
Criteria-based RTP testing reduced recurrence to 5% vs 22% with time-only criteria. Time alone does not capture neuromuscular and psychological readiness.
Surgical-vs-conservative RCTs uniformly describe their conservative arms as "supervised rehabilitation" with no sets, reps, load, or progression criteria. Chiddarwar 2023 (BJSM, N=3598) explicitly identified this as a limitation. Clinicians applying "conservative management" reproduce unknown protocols. Frame any "12-week trial" as 12 weeks of real phase-criteria-driven loading, not calendar time.
Most surgical-vs-conservative RCTs enroll younger motivated athletes presenting to specialist centers. Davey 2023 fragility index analysis shows the median FI is 2 — many headline findings rest on flipping 1–2 patient outcomes. Stratify by age, demand, and bone-loss status; the 4-fold recurrence reduction is most robust in young contact athletes and diminishes in older or lower-demand cohorts.
Velasquez Garcia 2023 (N=1093) shows ~34% of physically-eligible post-stabilization athletes do not return at pre-injury level. Most clinics gate RTS on physical metrics only. Add Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia and SI-RSI screening at the late-rehab milestone; pain neuroscience education and graded exposure are appropriate when scores indicate elevated fear.
Conservative success rate is age- and demand-dependent. For under-25 contact athletes, only ~30–50% achieve full functional return without recurrence at 24 months. For 25–40 year-old recreational patients, ~50–80%. For over-40 low-demand patients, ~60–85% (with the caveat that cuff status often matters more than the labrum).
Surgical (arthroscopic Bankart) outcomes: ~85–92% no recurrence at 24+ months in first-time dislocators across Hurley 2020, Belk 2023, Alkhatib 2022, Hu 2023, and Abdel Khalik 2024. Latarjet ~94–96% no recurrence in recurrent or critical-bone-loss cases.
When surgery IS indicated: Young contact-sport first-time dislocator with a Bankart lesion. Recurrent dislocations (≥2) regardless of age in active patients. Glenoid bone loss approaching ~13.5–20% on 3D CT. Engaging Hill-Sachs with mechanical block. Failed structured 12–16 week conservative trial in a motivated patient. Combined posterior or SLAP labral lesion identified on MRA.
When conservative IS sufficient: Age over 30 with a low-demand activity profile and an isolated anteroinferior Bankart. Age over 40 with a first-time dislocation and no critical bone loss (with concurrent cuff workup). Atraumatic / hyperlaxity-driven instability without major structural lesion. Patient declines surgery and accepts the elevated recurrence risk with informed counsel.
The honest truth: For a young, active patient with a first-time anterior dislocation, the data is now clear that early arthroscopic Bankart repair reduces the recurrence rate roughly fourfold compared with a conservative trial. Each subsequent dislocation makes a future surgery harder by progressively damaging the bony rim. For an older, lower-demand patient, conservative management has a much better chance of working on its own. The decision is not "surgery vs no surgery" — it is "which path matches this patient's age, demands, structural injury, and values," made with imaging and informed counsel.
How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.
Physio conditions reviewed against clinical evidence. What works, what doesn't, and what to do — from a practising physiotherapist.
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