Shoulder Pain
Causes of Shoulder Pain
This occurs when your humeral head (the ball that sits in your shoulder socket) moves abnormally especially when you raise your arm.
This occurs when your rotator cuff muscles become torn or damaged. Your rotator cuff is made up of four muscles that attach to the humerus head and keeps it firmly in your shoulder socket.
This is when the tissues in your shoulder wear out, allowing the ball to glide freely out of the socket. Dislocation is a type of shoulder instability.
This occurs when the bursa (thin fluid-filled sac) becomes inflamed and this results in pain
A shoulder fracture is an injury to any of the shoulder bones and may result in the bone breaking or cracking.
This occurs when the tissues making up your ligaments or muscles (tendons) get torn.
Physical therapy usually provides relief to shoulder pain in most cases. However, in very severe cases when physical therapy doesn’t work, shoulder surgery is recommended.
This could be shoulder replacement (where damaged parts of your shoulder joint are replaced with artificial parts), or surgery to fix a fracture or a tear.
Whatever is the case, post-surgery rehab is important for getting the most out of your surgery. It would help you heal quickly, and recover completely.