1. Dislocations: MedlinePlus
Dislocations are joint injuries that force the ends of your bones out of position. The cause is often a fall or a blow, sometimes from playing a contact sport. When a dislocation occurs, you can't move the joint. You can dislocate your ankles, kne...
MedlinePlus (Offsite)
2. Hip Dislocation
A hip dislocation occurs when the ball of the thighbone (femur) moves out of place within the socket of the pelvic bone (acetabulum). This ball and socket forms the hip joint.
www.mbhs.org
3. Dislocation of the hip
A dislocation is an injury in which a bone is displaced from its proper position. Unless there are accompanying fractures or tissue damage, a simple dislocation may be manipulated back into place. Recovery may include immobilizing the area where d...
www.clarian.org
4. Your Orthopaedic Connection: Hip Dislocation
A hip dislocation occurs when the head of the thighbone (femur) slips out of its socket in the hip bone (pelvis). In approximately 90% of patients, the thighbone is pushed out of its socket in a backwards direction (posterior dislocation). This le...
www.orthoinfo.org
5. Developmental Dislocation of the Hip
Developmental dislocation of the hip surfaces during the first year of a child's life and is characterized by loose, dislocatable or dislocated hips. The condition can occur at birth or shortly thereafter; thus it is important that your...
my.clevelandclinic.org
6. Hip Replacement Dislocations
On August 10th while getting groceries out of my car trunk I dislocated my right hip, it had been replaced in summer of 2003. Has anyone else had this problem? What did you or Dr do? Hip is of course now relocated(?) after falling on sidewalk by c.....
community.arthritis.org
7. Hip Fractures, Dislocations, and Sprains
Hip Fractures, Dislocations, and Sprains
www.noah-health.org
8. Dislocation, Hip: eMedicine Emergency Medicine
In general, hip dislocations can be classified into congenital and traumatic. The annual incidence of congenital hip dislocation is approximately 2-4 cases per 1000 births, and approximately 80-85% of the affected individuals are girls. Congenital...
emedicine.medscape.com
9. Hip Dislocation - Conditions and Treatments - HSS
The hip is a ball-and-socket joint, which gives it a great deal of stability and allows it to move freely. The round head of the thighbone (femur) fits inside a cup-shaped socket (acetabulum) in the hipbone (pelvis). It requires substantial force ...
rheumatology.hss.edu
10. Congenital hip dislocation - Shands Healthcare
Although most dislocations are caused by a blow, fall, or other trauma, a dislocation can also occur from birth. The cause is unknown but genetic factors may play a role. Problems resulting from very mild developmental dysplasia of the hip may not...
www.shands.org