The most common dislocation is anterior displacement of the humerous. The least common is inferior (downward) displacement.
The usual direction of dislocation is the front or anterior.
your shoulder can dislocate forwards, and backwords
forward and downward direction
Anteriorly
The anterior
"To dislocate a shoulder you need alot and i mean alot of force" Actually no. The amount of force required to dislocate a shoulder depends on the position the shoulder is and the direction force is applied. Ex: An arm stretched straight forward(90 degrees, straight) is the most difficult to dislocate if the force is applied to the front of the shoulder. If I remember correctly it takes a force of 84ish N(18.89 pounds of force) to the middle deltoid to dislocate a shoulder in that position(an average man can punch at between 60-90 foot lbs I think, I read it somewhere and can't find it again) Again it all depends on the position of the shoulder and the position of the force applied to the shoulder.
forward and downward direction
No, a dislocation only occurs when a joint is separated from other bones that were attached to it. When you dislocate your shoulder the ball end of your humerus is outside of your shoulder's socket.
The meaning of "to dislocate your sholder" is to misplace your sholder. Like, if you break your sholder. to dislocate your sholder. dislocate means to locate something another way.--------"You usually dislocate your shoulder by a combination of a sudden jerk and awkward arm position (see below) which causes the ball at the top of your humorous to slip out of the shoulder socket. It almost always slips over the bottom lip of the shoulder socket so that the ball submarines down toward the armpit while the shoulder blade gets pushed up a bit. The dislocation involves a fair amount of stretching, ripping, and detaching in the large quantity of soft tissue which surrounds the joint. The muscles which surround the joint will go into spasm immediately. It turns out they're pretty strong. The spasm causes much of the pain, and makes the relocation more difficult. Try to relax and not move. Any movement will re-tense things up which is no help. " http://sunburn.stanford.edu/~nick/miscdocs/shoulder_dislocation.html
A person is more likely to dislocate their shoulder. The hip joint is larger and the ligaments that attach the bones are larger/stronger. The muscles around the hip are also larger helping keep the bone in place
It can be either.The gun will recoil when he fires it (verb). If he is not careful, the recoil will dislocate his shoulder (noun)!
My father learned that the surest way to dislocate his shoulder was to reach back for a heavy rifle while running forward during a bombing raid. The Serbs attempted to dislocate the Albanian Kosovars, just as the Albanians had done to the Serbs 500 years earlier.
It might have landed hard on something and needs to be taken to the vet ASAP.
From what i've come across, yes, he did actually dislocate his shoulder or shoulders out and back in that scene, they did or they were going to use special effects but they didn't or DID, i don't know. If he really did, that was BADASS
Yes, the jaw can be dislocated, usually as a result of trauma.