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*Mandibular condyle forced in front of the articular eminence | *Mandibular condyle forced in front of the articular eminence | ||
*May happen bilaterally or unilaterally | |||
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==EX== | ==EX== | ||
'''Superior''' dislocations occur after being punched below the mandibular ramus as the mouth remains half-open. Since great force occurs in a punch, the angle of the jaw will be forced upward moving towards the [[condylar]] head. This can result in a fracture of the glenoid fossa and displacement of the condyle into the [[middle cranial fossa]], potentially injuring the [[facial nerve|facial]] and [[vestibulocochlear nerve]]s and the [[temporal lobe]]. '''Lateral''' dislocations move the mandibular condyle away from the skull and are likely to happen together with jaw fractures.<ref name=EMedicine823775/><ref name=pmid21474286>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/j.ijom.2011.02.031 |pmid=21474286 |title=Management of long-standing mandibular dislocation |journal=International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery |volume=40 |issue=8 |pages=810–4 |year=2011 |last1=Huang |first1=I-Y. |last2=Chen |first2=C.-M. |last3=Kao |first3=Y.-H. |last4=Chen |first4=C.-M. |last5=Wu |first5=C.-W. }}</ref> | |||
Posterior, superior and lateral dislocations are uncommon injuries and usually result from high-energy trauma to the chin. By contrast, anterior dislocations are more often the result of low-energy trauma (e.g. [[tooth extraction]]) or secondary to a medical condition that affects the stability of the joint (e.g. [[seizure]]s, ligamentous laxity, degeneration of joint capsule). | Posterior, superior and lateral dislocations are uncommon injuries and usually result from high-energy trauma to the chin. By contrast, anterior dislocations are more often the result of low-energy trauma (e.g. [[tooth extraction]]) or secondary to a medical condition that affects the stability of the joint (e.g. [[seizure]]s, ligamentous laxity, degeneration of joint capsule). | ||
Revision as of 20:28, 17 December 2019
| Dislocation Type | Frequency | Mechanism | Additional Comments | Associated with fracture? | Image |
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| Posterior |
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| Lateral |
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| Superior |
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EX
Superior dislocations occur after being punched below the mandibular ramus as the mouth remains half-open. Since great force occurs in a punch, the angle of the jaw will be forced upward moving towards the condylar head. This can result in a fracture of the glenoid fossa and displacement of the condyle into the middle cranial fossa, potentially injuring the facial and vestibulocochlear nerves and the temporal lobe. Lateral dislocations move the mandibular condyle away from the skull and are likely to happen together with jaw fractures.[1][2]
Posterior, superior and lateral dislocations are uncommon injuries and usually result from high-energy trauma to the chin. By contrast, anterior dislocations are more often the result of low-energy trauma (e.g. tooth extraction) or secondary to a medical condition that affects the stability of the joint (e.g. seizures, ligamentous laxity, degeneration of joint capsule).
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
<ref>tag; no text was provided for refs namedEMedicine823775 - ↑ Template:Cite journal
