A new drug free technique for reducing anterior shoulder dislocations
Five cases of anterior shoulder dislocation are reported. The dislocations were reduced quickly, painlessly and without the use of drugs using the ‘Cunningham technique.’ The practice and theory of the technique are described. The ‘Cunningham technique’ is a useful single operator method of reducing anterior shoulder dislocations. Further research is being undertaken to reproduce the results in a larger patient group and also to examine how easily the technique can be taught.
Download PDF – A new drug free technique for reducing anterior shoulder dislocations (1396)
Related Posts
January 2012 – Relocation troubleshooting
ShoulderDislocation.net has posted two new videos on our YouTube channel and Videos page. These videos are quite a bit different from the others - in that things didn't quite go as smoothly as we would have hoped. In both of these shoulder dislocations the relocation was proving to be a little difficult and might prompt abandonment of the techniques in favour of heavier sedation. The first video shows a patient with in whom the muscle spasm was unable to be overcome with simple positioning and a variety of manoeuvres. She eventually required sedation resulting an a quick reduction In the second video, the patient has a subglenoid dislocation, and the operator tries to get the patient to adduct the arm. Unfortunately this is difficult, so Neil talks the operator through a series of manoeuvres to manipulate the humerus into the correct position, including attempting Zero Position. Eventually the shoulder is relocated.
Read storyDecember 2011 – Neil Cunningham talks to EM-RAPs Scott Weingard
This month, Neil Cunningham talks to Scott Weingart from EM-RAP about shoulder dislocation and the various methods of achieving relocation. The podcast is available for subscribers to EM-RAP. Neil focuses particularly on non-analgesic relocation methods, analgesic positioning, and talks about the recent translation of Kocher's method.
Read story


By Ajimon July 30, 2011 - 4:28 pm
my shoulder is dislocating during the sleep and when i was taking the hand in back side is it possible recover from this without surgery
By gfennessy August 1, 2011 - 11:05 am
Hi, and thanks for your question. It is worthwhile having a discussion with your family doctor regarding this, who may refer you to a surgeon. Your injury sounds like it would benefit from surgery but this depends on a few factors that your family doctor would be best placed to sort out.