Your Painful Shoulder

When your shoulder is painful and stiff, you quickly realize how much you depend on this most flexible and mobile of joints for daily tasks. Your chiropractic physician can evaluate and treat your shoulder. You can help, too, with a program of home care and exercise to keep your shoulder moving safely. Your chiropractor will tell you which of the following shoulder problems you have.

  • Neurologic Referred Pain - Pain can radiate to the shoulders from compressed and inflamed nerve roots in your neck or from problems in your internal organs. "Referred" pain is usually a dull ache that gradually gets worse.
  • Bursitis and tendonitis - Years of overusing your shoulder by lifting, reaching, or repeated overwork can inflame the bursa and tendons of your shoulder. The pain is localized, but limits shoulder mobility.
  • Degenerative Arthritis - As you age, normal wear and tear can damage the bone, cartilage, and saclike bursa in your shoulder. unprotected bone surfaces rub together, causing a dull ache that gets progressively worse.
  • Rotator Cuff Injury - One or more of the four rotator cuff tendons that hold your arm in place can be inflamed or torn by injury. The disorder is painful and limits the mobility of your shoulder.
  • Frozen Shoulder - When your shoulder is in pain, you tend to keep it immobile. This under use can lead to adhesions, which limit your shoulder mobility until suddenly it "freezes". The pain can be intense.

Your Remarkable, Fragile Shoulder Shoulder

Imagine if your shoulder joint had no more flexibility than your hip joint. Your arms, hands, and fingers couldn't do many of the everyday tasks your remarkable shoulder joint permits. It is the most flexible, mobile, yet fragile joint you have.

Your chiropractor can tell you which parts of your shoulder are causing your problem.

Your Shoulder parts

Like all joints, your shoulder is comprised of many parts. The shoulder joint includes bone, cartilage, a bursa lining, nerves, and many muscles, tendons, and ligaments that hold it together. Your should is particularly fragile because its exceptional flexibility and mobility make it vulnerable to wear and tear.

Your Shoulder in Motion

Flexion and ExtensionWhether you are a computer operator or plumber, a weekend athlete or cheerleader, it is your shoulder that allows your arms and hands to function with a wide range of motion. Here are the ways strong, flexible muscles keep your shoulder moving safely.

  • Abduction-adduction is the up-down motion of your arm to the side of your body.
  • Flexion and extension are the forward-backward motions of your arm.
  • External rotation is the outward swing of your arm away from the front of your body.
  • Internal rotation is the inward swing of your arm toward the front of your body.

 

Your Shoulder in Trouble

Overuse or underused can cause pain and stiffness that lead to immobility. This, in turn, causes muscle weakness and adhesions around the joint which further limit mobility and cause more pain. And so the cycle goes until one day your shoulder stops working. Treatment, safe use, and exercise can break the "shoulder in trouble" cycle. The Doctor of Chiropractic