Dislocation of the coccyx, hip and their symptoms

When the tailbone is dislocated, you recognize it by touch, and you determine the degree of dislocation by touch and by the fact that the patient cannot stretch his leg either at the site of the dislocation or near the knee, and it is even more difficult for him to bend his knee.

As for the treatment, if you want to straighten the joint, you should insert the patient’s middle finger into the rectum and, when it is opposite the damaged area, press it upward with force. And with the other hand you monitor the position of the tailbone until it is aligned. The patient should eat less so that there is less feces, and at the same time let him consume foods that soften the nature.

Sometimes the same thing happens to the hip that happens to the shoulder, and it dislocates downward, as if relaxing. If the hip is dislocated, then it is impossible to stretch the leg either near the dislocation or near the knee, and it is even more difficult at the knee. Dislocation of the hip can occur both inwardly and outwardly, but most often it dislocates outwardly, and dislocation inwardly occurs rarely, but it also dislocates anteriorly or posteriorly, and this happens for the same reasons. When this happens during childbirth or during excision of a baby, the leg remains short, with a narrow shin it cannot bear the weight of the body and is weak, not strong.

When the hip is dislocated medially, you see that the dislocated leg is longer than the other and the knee protrudes more strongly. The patient cannot bend the leg at the groin, and the groin appears swollen and swollen as the head of the femur is squeezed into it. And when the hip is dislocated outward, the leg shortens and a depression appears in the groin; in the place opposite it behind, a protrusion and swelling occurs, and the knee appears to be sunk inward.

When the leg is dislocated in front, the patient is able to stretch his lower leg, but can only bend it with pain, and he is completely unable to walk, and if he forces himself to walk, he falls on his heel, sometimes this causes fractures, the groin swells and urine is retained. If the hip is dislocated posteriorly, then the leg is shortened and it is difficult for the patient to both extend and tuck the leg, but sometimes he manages to bend the lower leg by bending the leg in the groin, relaxation appears in the groin, and the head of the femur deviates towards the abdomen.