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Incrementalization of the Cunningham Technique for Anterior Shoulder Reduction

By Richard M. Levitan, MD, FACEP | on July 24, 2019 | 6 Comments
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  1. Raise bed height so the patient is slightly elevated relative to your seated position facing them—their relaxed forearm needs to be resting (horizontally) on your shoulder. If the right shoulder is dislocated, the patient will rest the right arm on your right shoulder.
  2. Have the patient relax the right arm onto your right shoulder.
  3. Ask the patient to shrug their shoulders backward, to push out the chest, straighten the back, and keep both shoulders even. The patient should lift their head up. One way to describe the correct position is to position the shoulders and back as they would be in a wall sit (description courtesy of my colleague Amy F. Lucas, PA).
  4. Ask the patient to breath slowly in and out, focusing on relaxing their muscles and rotating their shoulders backward.
  5. Your left hand massages the patient’s deltoid and biceps.
  6. Your right hand applies gentle straight downward traction to the elbow while adducting it against the patient’s side. This should not exceed five pounds of downward force.
  7. The second operator goes behind the patient, helping them rotate the shoulders backward, keeping the shoulders square, and massaging the right and left trapezius.

When done properly, patients are amazed how easy and fast this reduction technique can be. No drugs, no sedation, no IVs. I usually have patients reduced before registration is complete. The paperwork takes longer than the reduction itself!

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ACEP Now: Vol 37 – No 08 – August 2018, ACEP Now: Vol 38 – No 07 – July 2019

Incrementalization of the Cunningham Technique for Anterior Shoulder Reduction

This is such a gentle technique that I do not routinely X-ray patients before reduction, assuming the patient is cognitively intact, the injury is obviously isolated, and the mechanism of injury is unlikely to have caused a fracture. I rarely do pre-reduction films for the recurrent dislocator.

There are times when the Cunningham technique won’t work. You can expect difficulty with very obese patients. Some patients are too anxious or are in too much distress to relax and assist with positioning. In general, reductions are more difficult in patients with delayed presentations; I usually use medication in these cases and obtain pre-reduction films. I rarely combine medication with the Cunningham technique. However, if needed, an intra-articular injection of 20 cc of lidocaine beneath the acromion can be effective enough to avoid the need for sedation while permitting a more forceful manipulation technique.

FIGURE 1C. The patient’s relaxed forearm rests horizontally on the physician’s shoulder. The physician massages the patient’s deltoid and biceps with their left hand and applies gentle downward traction to the elbow while adducting it against the patient’s side with their right hand. FIGURE 1D. The patient takes slow, deep breaths and rotates their shoulders backward. The assistant helps rotate the patient’s shoulders and keep the shoulders square while massaging the right and left trapezius.

The Technique’s Many Benefits

Deploying the Cunningham technique has exponentially positive effects. It dramatically lessens length of stay and minimizes use of departmental resources. I believe that the gentle massaging of the patient has a significant analgesic effect. Coordinating your efforts with the second operator (nurse or technician) makes the procedure go more smoothly. It is great for team building, allowing others to participate in a successful procedure.

Incrementalizing your procedures so you perform better can translate into positive effects on your job perception. It can lower stress because you are operating well within your comfort zone due to an approach that favors small, achievable, and believable steps. It allows you to transmit confidence and reassurance to the patient. Patients greatly appreciate the reassurance and acknowledge that your expertise allows you to take good care of them.

What I love about incrementalization is that takes me away from tedious tasks, like running sedation checklists and getting unnecessary radiographs. I am happier in my job—and better at it—since I started engineering and incrementalizing my practice. It even allows me to be present for the patients themselves. If you embrace incrementalization, I believe you’ll find your own ways to improve your practice and thereby even your own wellness. In the meantime, start with the incrementalized two-person Cunningham—it’s awesome! 

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Topics: Cunningham Techniqueincrementalizationshoulder reduction

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About the Author

Richard M. Levitan, MD, FACEP

Richard M. Levitan, MD, FACEP, is an adjunct professor of emergency medicine at Dartmouth’s Geisel School of Medicine in Hanover, N.H., and a visiting professor of emergency medicine at the University of Maryland in Baltimore. He works clinically at a critical care access hospital in rural New Hampshire and teaches cadaveric and fiber-optic airway courses.

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6 Responses to “Incrementalization of the Cunningham Technique for Anterior Shoulder Reduction”

  1. July 28, 2019

    Frank Fower Reply

    Sounds wonderful, and Works Good.
    I have been using the same Incriminating Engineering Since 1993 : though : I Call it Baby Steps
    I have one Extra Step here : I massage the scapula and Trapezius while I am taking the patient about how to straighten and square their shoulders: then push the Tip
    Lower Scapular Angle Medialy towards The Vertebral Column : then go to the front to sit and Proceed
    Most of the Times: its Already Reduced : pain free
    No Meds.

    FrankFower MD, FACEP

  2. July 28, 2019

    Jeffrey Freeman Reply

    Like most shoulder reduction techniques, an experienced operator has learned subtle improvements that improve their success in their hands. These incremental improvements are rarely published (as are few of the subtle clues to better procedures – hence the better outcomes for ‘experts’). Thanks for publishing these – there’s no question that a fast Cunningham expertly done is one of the easiest ways to put in a shoulder. I agree with the xray comments as well.
    [I’m waiting for incrementalization of fecal impaction, chart documentation and getting out early….]

  3. July 28, 2019

    DAVID O JONES Reply

    Tried many times and it never works

  4. July 29, 2019

    Curtis Henderson, PhD, DO, FACEP Reply

    Thank you.
    I have practice incrementalization unwittingly for decades of practice; I always called it superstition! I realized long ago if , after a few times of success, I engage a particular mindset (focus), set up exactly the same way and performed a procedure in a similar way , my success would continue. This would include laceration repair, LPs, intubation, procedural sedation, closed thoracostomy, fracture/dislocation reduction and the other many complicated intense actions we do. There is virtually no exception to this approach, but it takes time to learn this and to proceed with style and finesse. This article is pointed in its conclusions. I have not tried the Cunningham approach, but I will.
    Regards

  5. June 27, 2020

    Marna Greenberg Reply

    The trick is to have the person assisting on the patient’s posterior to press gently medially on the lower scapular angle (it is really this that does the most , and similar to scapular manipulation reductions just doing it sitting up instead of prone)

  6. October 20, 2020

    Matt DiStefano Reply

    Like all things, the devil is the in details. You need to understand the anatomy, trust the process, and be patient. We have a case series that we’ll publish in 2021 of 183 shoulder reductions, 62% of which were accomplished via Cunningham technique. Rich you can contact me through casted.ca if you want to chat.

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