22 May 2026
: Case report
Delayed Diagnosis of Bilateral Posterior Shoulder Fracture–Dislocation Following a Seizure: A Case Report
Challenging differential diagnosis, Unusual or unexpected effect of treatment, Rare coexistence of disease or pathology
César Alejandro Jiménez-Aroche ABCDEFG 1*, Juan Ramón Jiménez Castro BDEFG 1, José Luis Millet Herrera ABDEF 1, Laurence José Conway Restrepo BCEFG 1, David Gerardo Garza Cruz ABCDF 1, José Eduardo Miranda Mayén BCDFG 1, Javiera Irribaren Bravo BCDF 1, Roberto Irribaren Gómez ABCDEFG 1DOI: 10.12659/AJCR.952420
Am J Case Rep 2026; 27:e952420
Figure 1 Clinical appearance of bilateral posterior shoulder dislocation. Physical examination demonstrates abnormal posterior prominence of both shoulders with loss of the normal deltoid contour. The humeral heads are displaced posteriorly, producing a visible “empty glenoid” appearance. Active range of motion is severely limited in both shoulders.






