No, I have not tried either but I would definitely be willing to. Who do I see about doing either of these? I'm guessing a physical therapist?
Thanks guys. Well saw my physio again today, he pretty much wrapped things up and said I dont need a follow up unless something new comes along, he said it seems like inflammation of the bursa and he seemed pretty confident of it, he also did some strength tests and said my right(injured) shoulder is stronger than my left and the internal external rotation balance is quiet good. He also tested abduction strength and my right is a lot stronger than my left(this would be from barbell work). He said the pain should go away after 6 weeks total, it hasnt been that long yet. He is basing the diagnosis on that I dont get any pain while doing any exercises but after, and there is no loss of strength, there was no pain with abduction against resistance. I do trust what he says I guess I will find out in the next few weeks if it is the case.
Well it has been almost 6 weeks since I saw my PT and I haven't been working out because it has just been gradually getting worse, its not the pain getting worse just the frequency, I have been keeping my shoulder out of the impingement zone but still get pain doing random stuff like tying my shoelaces and other things that involve my arm being completely adducted.
I just did some light resistance and my shoulder hurt while abducting during the 1st 20 degrees, so its making me wonder if it is actually a tear or not, its not a sharp pain its dull and about a 2 on a scale of 1-10.
I'm not going to pretend like I completely understand that one either, but I get similar pains in my acromion process (the bony prominence on the very top of your shoulder, seems to separate your upper trapezius muscle from lateral deltoid). I believe it is because I have a sprain/strain of the acromioclavicular ligament, that is its point of attachment, but it feels like bone pain, so I do understand what you are talking about. Here is a website that will help explain where my pain is: Invalid Link Removed So I believe you have a sprain/strain of a tendon (tendon attaches muscle to bone) if it is strained at the point of bone attachment it will simulate bone pain right at the point of attachment. Because I am not there to personally pinpoint where your pain is and determine which muscle/tendon attachments are hurting, you would probably do best Googling an anatomy chart of muscles and tendons in the area you are experiencing pain and do your best to figure it out that way, if you are trying to figure it out on your own. It also sounds like you have multiple stress points even though they are probably all inter-related/connected from one initial injury.
Dr Scott,
You describe the same pain I have in my right shoulder. It feel as if it is the bone at the top end of my shoulder. It is tender to the touch.
I've seen a chiropractor about my back and shoulder, he told me to just stretch my shoulder and ice it. My shoulder was pulling forward too much (prior to working out) but is retracting now.
The pain in my right shoulder has been going on for years, I've seen a doctor couple of times who gave me anti inflamation meds, and couple of steroid shots in the shoulder at different times with no result.
Right now if I lift both my arms to the side forming L shape parallel to the floor then rotating my forarm up perpendicular to the floor I feel pain as if something being squeezed inside my shoulders and some poping noise. I also get shooting pain from shoulders down my biceps when benching but no pain when doing overhead press.
I've been icing them, is there something else I can do? I'm planning on switching to heat/ice technique as you mentioned.
So, it's been 2 months and I've still got some pain in my left upper trapezius! I guess the best description of what's going on in the area is as follows:...
...
Also, what happened at the physio may have been something called "centralization". Its actually a good thing if the problem was nerve root impingment. I wont get into it, but just know it may have not been such a bad incidence...
Hey Scotty, I followed your link over to this thread. After reading the original post, I agree with your overall philosophy.
I have just a few minor additions to suggest. I like to stress that control is priority through a pain free range. For example, external rotations can cause irritation (sometimes worsen impingement) at the end range. In which case, you can still force blood into the cuff within a shorter range.
On that note, I also recommend starting off with the "elbow at side" position rather than the "football throw" position. There's nothing wrong with the football throw position after the cuff is warm. At the same time, I'd say it's probably gonna irritate the cuff if it's the first movement. Also, most lifters in the general popular can't tell if it's a labral issue rather than cuff. So, that position might make the labral issue worse, whereas elbow at side is open packed without labral stress.
Finally, I really respect your emphasis on autonomy. I believe that comes from practitioners that genuinely care more about the patient than the business dollars. I firmly believe that patient's get the best results when the physician, chiro, PT, etc all work together.
Hey ScottyDoc hopping you could share your wisdom. I had an MRI last month, notes stated
"The acromium is of type one configuration with no significant slope. The acromioclavicular joint is normal. The supraspinatus and infraspinatus tendons are intact. No abnormality is seen in relation to the long head of biceps. A 9mm pocket of fluid is seen adjacent to the anterior aspect of the glenoid labrum. The appearances are highly suggestive of an anterior labral tear and referral to a shoulder surgeon is advised for further evaluation."
Its been 5 months since the injury happened, been attending PT since Feb and have shown little improvement. I have always had full range of movement without pain except for certain rotator cuff exercies, but certainly no agonising pain - no tenderness anymore (was quite severe at the time, Inflamination?) and the "clicking" I was experienced had died down, which again did not cause pain.
Is this injury similar to a "SLAP tear"?
Hey ScottyDoc hopping you could share your wisdom. I had an MRI last month, notes stated
"The acromium is of type one configuration with no significant slope. The acromioclavicular joint is normal. The supraspinatus and infraspinatus tendons are intact. No abnormality is seen in relation to the long head of biceps. A 9mm pocket of fluid is seen adjacent to the anterior aspect of the glenoid labrum. The appearances are highly suggestive of an anterior labral tear and referral to a shoulder surgeon is advised for further evaluation."
Its been 5 months since the injury happened, been attending PT since Feb and have shown little improvement. I have always had full range of movement without pain except for certain rotator cuff exercies, but certainly no agonising pain - no tenderness anymore (was quite severe at the time, Inflamination?) and the "clicking" I was experienced had died down, which again did not cause pain.
Is this injury similar to a "SLAP tear"?
Thanks for the reply ScottyDoc I greatly appreciate your time. So far my doctor has arranged a meeting with a shoulder surgeon who I should be seeing soon.
I believe it happend from using to much swinging during my last heavy set of front dumbell raises. From what I have read, this type of motion is a common cause for this type of injury i.e forward forceful movement.
They day after, it started with a more dull ache pain going down side of left upper arm (on the left hand side of the bicep region) that slowly progress into a more sharp pain and resulted in loss of strength, although I was still able to push/pull heavy. Grabbing the squat bar behind neck, really aggraivted the pain in upper arm. Wierd thing was I never felt pain in my shoulder at all.
It flared up worse after I stopped lifting and became very inflamed - which has dramatically died down since takin anti-flam and my shoulder is no longer tender when pressure applied.
I have been seeing a private physiopherapist, comes very recommended, since February who diagnosed my condition as a tear to anterior dealt and rotator cuff - never mentioned labral/SLAP tear or surgery, said I should be 100% if not near by 12 weeks - certainly not the case.
PT exercises included front raises, lateral raises, bicep curls, tricep extensions. I personally decided to add in varrious rotator cuff execrises.
I fear surgery is the only option left. Do you personally know the success rate and will I ever be 100% or hindered for life?
I cannot post without thanking you, your time means a lot to me, especially as every other so called "expert" has looked at me as a joke whenever they saw I had full ROM.
I have been saying from day 1 it was somehting more serious and having been pushing for an MRI for months and I was right on the money all along.
I have been researching for hours into this type of injury, so its going to be harder for the surgeon to pull the wool over my eyes compared to the normal guy who walks in. Typically if he tries this, then I'll know to walk away and find another surgeon - not going to let someone butcher me.
I'm going to be on GHRP 2 + CJC 1295, cissus, fish oils, glucosamine vit c etc... so hopefully will help me recover strong and well. Luckily my game is bodybuilding not powerlfting, so as long as I can eventually get back in the gym and train hard, I'll know I'll be back where I was and more.
You deserve an enormous amount of praise for this thread, god bless and thank you ScottyDoc.
bezoe very greatful for the information. My consultation should be within the next 4 weeks, so I'll be sure to get the specific information you requested. Would appreciate you posting anything else you think might be useful as this is going to be my 1st time surgery, I want to make sure I do everything correctly.
Scotty, this a long thread that I don't have time to read in entirety this moment but I've recently won a battle with my shoulders that were both giving my grief. After a day of tabada push presses both sides in the clavicle area got very sore and then the right shoulder got really painful in the bicep long tendon and then down the back side of my delts. Lasted for days and get worse and worse. Finally went into to see my doc who verified that the rotator cuffs were fine overall and hit me with 10cc's of lidocaine in the affected tendons to turn the pain signal off and see if they just needed to understand that I was healing. We discussed what would be next if necessary and landed on Prolotherapy. Are you familiar with Prolo and have you used it or know others who have? I am integrating a lot resistance band excercies into my regimen after this recent episode and will be back soon to learn more. Thanks for your time and killer contributions.
Scotty, this a long thread that I don't have time to read in entirety this moment but I've recently won a battle with my shoulders that were both giving my grief. After a day of tabada push presses both sides in the clavicle area got very sore and then the right shoulder got really painful in the bicep long tendon and then down the back side of my delts. Lasted for days and get worse and worse. Finally went into to see my doc who verified that the rotator cuffs were fine overall and hit me with 10cc's of lidocaine in the affected tendons to turn the pain signal off and see if they just needed to understand that I was healing. We discussed what would be next if necessary and landed on Prolotherapy. Are you familiar with Prolo and have you used it or know others who have? I am integrating a lot resistance band excercies into my regimen after this recent episode and will be back soon to learn more. Thanks for your time and killer contributions.
Scotty,
this site Invalid Link Removed is a good one and they also publish a journal. Though they are "selling" a service there the information seems very sound.
My arbitrary opinion is that it probably wouldnt hurt to try.
We are on the same page. I was thinking the same thing. :cheers:
Interested in prolotherapy for shoulder injuries. Any input from someone who has had this therapy would be great.