The shoulder is a very mobile joint with large ranges of movement in multiple directions.
Because of this high mobility it is one of the less stable joints in our bodies (basically you sacrifice
stability for mobility), and so it is one of the more commonly injured areas for our clients. Various structures
may be damaged including muscles, ligaments, tendons, cartilage and the joint itself.
What are the common causes
of shoulder pain?
Shoulder pain is often associated with repeated activities that involve moving
the arm above shoulder height such as tennis, swimming, weights at the gym (eg shoulder press, bench
press), and various work or home activities that involve reaching up or out to shelves or cupboards.
Other more traumatic injuries may be falls during contact sports like football, where tendons may be pinched or
the joint itself may be dislocated. Shoulder pain is also often associated with problems in the neck and so may
be related to spending long hours sitting at desks using computers.
How Precision Physio can help you
The most important stabilising system in the shoulder joint is a group of four muscles
called the rotator cuff. Because of the shoulder joint’s
high degree of mobility this muscular mechanism is extremely important and relatively delicate, and
if it is damaged it often needs specific physio treatment to get things back on track. Once we have
clarified your diagnosis and settled your inflammation, your physio will use a combination of hands-on techniques
linked with specific exercises to restore the strength in your rotator cuff as well as other muscle groups.
Posture
plays an important role in keeping your shoulder in the right position so your physio may also work with you to
improve this. Any other factors that may be relevant will also be discussed eg stretches for sport, correcting your
desk position at work, varying your swimming stroke and checking your technique for the gym. If you have had recurrent
or long-lasting episodes of shoulder pain then correcting these underlying factors and restoring optimal strength
to your rotator cuff and associated muscles is usually the key to breaking out of the pain cycle to achieve lasting
relief.
Next: Conditions > Work injuries
Sports injuries | Back pain | Shoulder
pain | Work injuries
Car
accidents | Headaches | Knee
pain | Neck pain