Pathologic displacement of a bone out of the natural anatomic boundaries of its fossae. It is frequently associated with pain, reduced range of motion of the affected bone, and ligament or cartilage pathosis. It may be chronic or recurrent.
In anatomy, a displacement of a bone from its joint.
A condition in which a bone is displaced from its usual position at a joint.
Displacement of a part, especially a bone, from its normal position, as in a shoulder or the vertebral column.
Displacement of the end of a bone from its normal position within a joint; usually caused by injury or trauma.
Displacement from their normal position of bones meeting at a joint. Dislocation of the shoulder is common in sports injuries, and congenital abnormalities may lead to repeated dislocations of the hip. The bones are restored to their normal positions by manipulation, which may require local or general anesthesia.
Injuries to joints of such a nature that the ends of the opposed bones are forced more or less out of connection with one another. Besides displacement of the bones, there is bruising of the tissues around them, and tearing of the ligaments which bind the bones together.
The displacement of any part, especially the temporary displacement of a bone from its normal position in a joint.
An injury in which a bone has been forced out of its normal position in a joint.
Bones are displaced from their normal joint alignment, out of their sockets, or out of their normal positions.