Anterior Shoulder Dislocation
An anterior dislocation accounts for 97% of recurrent or first time dislocations. It is the most common dislocation and is caused by the arm being positioned in an excessive amount of abduction and external rotation. In this position, the inferior glenohumeral complex serves as the primary restraint to anterior glenohumeral translation.[2] Due to a lack of ligamentous support and dynamic stabilization, the glenohumeral joint is most susceptible to dislocation in the 90 degree abduction and 90 degree external rotation.
Clinical Presentation
Anterior Dislocation
Following an acute anterior glenohumeral dislocation (Figure 5):
a. Arm held in an abducted and ER position
b. Loss of normal contour of the deltoid and acromion prominent posteriorly and laterally
c. Humeral head palpable anteriorly[2]
d. All movements limited and painful
e. Palpable fullness below the coracoid process
and towards the axilla[1]
Just to get things in perspective regarding cause and effect.
Mary Kelly's Right Arm
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"Causes the ARM to be slightly abducted." Not the shoulder. But, to me, that is academic and not at all relevant because in both cases it simply means 'moved away from the truck' and not detached.
Regarding the 'famous photo,' I do mean the famous one when I call it MJK2. MJK1 (to me) is the photo taken of the outside of No13, MKJ2 is the 'famous photo' & MKJ3 is the one taken from the partition toward the internal door/window in No13. Sorry if I confused the issue.
So, if we are talking about the same photo (the famous one), Then I would debate if Mary's right arm can be seen in that photo at all. I can certainly see what you're talking about with regard to the 'dolphin head' shaped object and the continuation that does indeed look arm-shaped. But I feel that what we are looking at there is blood-soaked sheets/blankets/mess and not her arm.
If It IS her arm, then you are correct that it is not 'slightly' abducted from her body, but massively abducted. So yes, the use of that adjective would be strange - in fact incorrect.
Which is why I debate that what we are seeing there is actually her right arm.
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Originally posted by richardh View Post"Don’t doctors sometimes use the term ‘abducted’ when describing a dislocation of the shoulder?"
No. They say things like 'anterior/posterior dislocation/subluxation' because 'abducted' in relation to shoulder dislocations is a wholly incorrect description.
And who mentioned the second Kelly photograph? Look at the famous one. Does her arm look 'slightly' abducted from her trunk (I assume you mean trunk)? What is slight about? I'm not challenging your interpretation, but I'm just curious why anyone would describe this as 'slight'. It's somewhere between a 45 and 90 degree angle. How does one get their hand clear over to the edge of the mattress, with the body turned to the left, if the upper arm is only 'slightly' away from the body and the shoulder is flat, as described?
You don't find his use of the adjective at all strange?
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In reality, doesn't it look like Kelly's right arm is considerably angled away from her body to where it is touching the far edge of the mattress? Not quite a right angle, but 45 degrees at least. If Bond's report was unavailable, would any think of describing this position as 'slightly' abducted?
Slightly dislocated is like being slightly pregnant.
A dislocation that has relocated but damaged the shoulder capsule is called 'subluxation'.
A dislocated shoulder would separate (not abduct) from the scapula (glenoid junction) by an inch at the most - hardly noticeable in a supine and static body. The humeral head would then drop and move anterior/posterior and then be pulled back to the midline by the strong shoulder muscles. A visible shoulder dislocation looks like a 'drooped' shoulder.
The report means the humerus (arm above the shoulder) is abducted from the truck, not the shoulder.
If Bond thought/knew the shoulder was dislocated he would have said this in his reports.
"Don’t doctors sometimes use the term ‘abducted’ when describing a dislocation of the shoulder?"
No. They say things like 'anterior/posterior dislocation/subluxation' because 'abducted' in relation to shoulder dislocations is a wholly incorrect description. The arm can be abducted but the shoulder girdle cannot.
"Yes? No? Maybe? Absolutely not? Spot on?"
erm... No!
sorry.
Last edited by richardh; 11-21-2020, 12:17 PM.
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostLet me pose a question.
Doesn’t anyone find Dr. Bond's use of the world 'slightly' at all strange?
Why ‘slightly’?
In reality, doesn't it look like Kelly's right arm is considerably angled away from her body to where it is touching the far edge of the mattress? Not quite a right angle, but 45 degrees at least. If Bond's report was unavailable, would any think of describing this position as 'slightly' abducted?
In short, what is he driving at? is he saying the arm is only slightly abducted at the shoulder, and what we are seeing is the arm awkwardly and radically rotated outward at the elbow? It is hard to see (in more ways than one) but it doesn’t really look like it.
Or is Dr. Bond actually suggesting that the shoulder is slightly dislocated?
Don’t doctors sometimes use the term ‘abducted’ when describing a dislocation of the shoulder?
I’ll answer my own question—yes.
This is from a description of dislocated shoulder injuries by Dr. Scott C. Sherman:
“Examination — An anteriorly dislocated shoulder causes the arm to be slightly abducted and externally rotated.”
Full link:
Shoulder dislocation and reduction - UpToDate
Conclusion: Kelly has been roughed-up and yanked around. The murderer has dislocated her shoulder.
Yes? No? Maybe? Absolutely not? Spot on?
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Originally posted by richardh View Post
Okay, So, out of interest, Wickerman, Debs, what side of the fence are you on that Mary's arm was indeed detached/partially detached from her trunk? The press and, I assume other unreliable sources state that her arm was off, but the attending dr and the carefully written report make absolutely no mention of this. The report even actually states:
"Both arms & forearms had extensive & jagged wounds."
yet makes no mention that one of them was severed! - surely that's something worth putting in the report using the same exact medical terminology that he used throughout the report? The only mention of 'removal' refers to the breasts.
At the inquest was anything mentioned that alluded to this severed limb?
Is there anything in official reports or from other trusted officials that lays mention to a dismembered right arm?
If so, please post the links and I might change my view
but...
I'll say it again and with 100% conviction that the right arm was fully attached to the truck and the killer made no attempt to remove it or any other limb.
Recently there was discussion that Dr Phillips had been confused on details and misremembering when mentioning the division of the neck and attempt of disarticulation of the spine of Mary Jane Kelly when examining the Pinchin Street torso and was mixing it up with details of Annie Chapman but a newspaper report from November 1888 describes the same thing -
"One of the doctors who assisted in the post mortem examination of the body of Mary Jane Kelly, the last Whitechapel victim, has come to the conclusion that the murderer has no anatomical knowledge, since in taking the heart out he cut through the diaphragm instead of opening the sternum. The uterus it seems, too, is not missing, as was once stated, but the heart is. The doctor has also come to the conclusion that the murderer made an attempt to decapitate the victim."
Dundee Evening Telegraph Nov 17th 1888
Many different doctors attended the scene but we only have one report, that of Dr Bond and there have been many discussions in the past and article written on whether this was the primary or only report made. Perhaps one of the other doctors was the source of contrary information given to the press? Some of the press in Nov 1888 were given precise details of the method used to remove MJK's heart, allegedly by a doctor at the scene and none of this was made public at the inquest but we know now from Bond's report, missing for a long number of years, was exactly the way it had been removed.
So,.. I am not ready to dismiss anything outright yet.Last edited by Debra A; 11-21-2020, 12:01 PM.
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Let me pose a question.
Doesn’t anyone find Dr. Bond's use of the world 'slightly' at all strange?
Why ‘slightly’?
In reality, doesn't it look like Kelly's right arm is considerably angled away from her body to where it is touching the far edge of the mattress? Not quite a right angle, but 45 degrees at least. If Bond's report was unavailable, would any think of describing this position as 'slightly' abducted?
In short, what is he driving at? is he saying the arm is only slightly abducted at the shoulder, and what we are seeing is the arm awkwardly and radically rotated outward at the elbow? It is hard to see (in more ways than one) but it doesn’t really look like it.
Or is Dr. Bond actually suggesting that the shoulder is slightly dislocated?
Don’t doctors sometimes use the term ‘abducted’ when describing a dislocation of the shoulder?
I’ll answer my own question—yes.
This is from a description of dislocated shoulder injuries by Dr. Scott C. Sherman:
“Examination — An anteriorly dislocated shoulder causes the arm to be slightly abducted and externally rotated.”
Full link:
Shoulder dislocation and reduction - UpToDate
Conclusion: Kelly has been roughed-up and yanked around. The murderer has dislocated her shoulder.
Yes? No? Maybe? Absolutely not? Spot on?
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
Bond's autopsy report was dated 16th Nov. though this may have been the date of filing. The Daily News article is dated 10th Nov., the full report by Bond for Anderson was dated 10th Nov., though stamped (received?) 14th.
The point being, Bond's report was not public knowledge on the 10th, and as far as we know it never became public knowledge.
"Both arms & forearms had extensive & jagged wounds."
yet makes no mention that one of them was severed! - surely that's something worth putting in the report using the same exact medical terminology that he used throughout the report? The only mention of 'removal' refers to the breasts.
At the inquest was anything mentioned that alluded to this severed limb?
Is there anything in official reports or from other trusted officials that lays mention to a dismembered right arm?
If so, please post the links and I might change my view
but...
I'll say it again and with 100% conviction that the right arm was fully attached to the truck and the killer made no attempt to remove it or any other limb.
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
Bond's autopsy report was dated 16th Nov. though this may have been the date of filing. The Daily News article is dated 10th Nov., the full report by Bond for Anderson was dated 10th Nov., though stamped (received?) 14th.
The point being, Bond's report was not public knowledge on the 10th, and as far as we know it never became public knowledge.
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Originally posted by richardh View Post
Indeed. Looks like the press was the first to make that incorrect assumption of the word 'abducted' and reported it thus.
The fact of the matter is that there was no attempt to detach Mary's arm by the killer. Slashed and hacked, maybe, but that's it.
The point being, Bond's report was not public knowledge on the 10th, and as far as we know it never became public knowledge.
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Originally posted by Debra A View Post
How would the press know that Bond had used the word 'abducted' in his report though?
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Originally posted by richardh View Post
Indeed. Looks like the press was the first to make that incorrect assumption of the word 'abducted' and reported it thus.
The fact of the matter is that there was no attempt to detach Mary's arm by the killer. Slashed and hacked, maybe, but that's it.
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Originally posted by Joshua Rogan View PostHi Richard,
If this is a myth, it doesn't stem entirely from a misunderstanding of Bond's autopsy report. Some of the earlier press reports include this detail, whether correct or not. Eg Daily News 10 Nov;
"Both thighs had been denuded of flesh, laying bare the bones, and the excised portions laid on the table. Some of the internal parts of the body had been taken away, while, in addition, one arm was almost severed from the trunk, and one hand thrust inside the empty cavity of the abdomen."
The fact of the matter is that there was no attempt to detach Mary's arm by the killer. Slashed and hacked, maybe, but that's it.
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Hi Richard,
If this is a myth, it doesn't stem entirely from a misunderstanding of Bond's autopsy report. Some of the earlier press reports include this detail, whether correct or not. Eg Daily News 10 Nov;
"Both thighs had been denuded of flesh, laying bare the bones, and the excised portions laid on the table. Some of the internal parts of the body had been taken away, while, in addition, one arm was almost severed from the trunk, and one hand thrust inside the empty cavity of the abdomen."
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First time I am aware that there is/was a school of thought that she had an arm removed? Has it been used in some bonkers theory? JTR was an arm collector or something?
Tristan
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