Trauma-instability-voluntarism classification for glenohumeral instability1
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Cited by (11)
Epidemiology of the Frequency, Etiology, Direction, and Severity (FEDS) system for classifying glenohumeral instability
2019, Journal of Shoulder and Elbow SurgeryCitation Excerpt :We have performed the first study looking at the epidemiology of a group of patients with use of the FEDS classification. Many experts have offered varying classifications of shoulder instability, with the 2 most prevalent components being symptoms and direction of translation of the humeral head within the glenoid.2,3,5-7,9,10,16,18,24,29,34 Including symptoms and direction of instability is a good start for a reproducible classification system but is not comprehensive.
Development and reliability testing of the frequency, etiology, direction, and severity (FEDS) system for classifying glenohumeral instability
2011, Journal of Shoulder and Elbow SurgeryCitation Excerpt :Items graded as extremely important (average score > 6.0) were used in developing the classification system for glenohumeral joint instability. The literature search identified 18 different proposed methods for describing glenohumeral joint instability.1,4-7,10,13,19,22,24,27-29,31,35,36,39,47 The individual and distinct characteristics for each classification system were extracted and listed in table format (Table I).
Functional outcome and quality of life after rehabilitation for voluntary posterior shoulder dislocation: a prospective blinded cohort study
2015, European Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and TraumatologyClassification of shoulder instability
2013, Controversies in Shoulder InstabilityA new classification system for shoulder instability
2010, British Journal of Sports Medicine
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Presented at the Twentieth Annual Meeting of the Japan Shoulder Society, Nagasaki, Japan, Oct. 2, 1993.