SHOULDER PAIN
Shoulder pain is an extremely common complaint that has many causes. Treatment of shoulder pain depends entirely on that cause
Your risk of developing osteoarthritis of the shoulder with its pain and physical limitations increases with age. But an injury, such as a dislocated shoulder, can lead to shoulder osteoarthritis even in young people.
Your biceps tendons attach the biceps muscle to bones in the shoulder and in the elbow. If you tear the biceps tendon at the shoulder, you may lose some strength in your arm and be unable to forcefully turn your arm from palm down to palm up.
A fall or blow causes the top of your arm bone to pop out of the shoulder socket. In severe cases of dislocated shoulder, the tissue and nerves around the shoulder joint get damaged.
Fracture type about the shoulder varies by age. The majority of fractures in children occur in the clavicle. In the adult, fractures within the upper part of the arm (proximal humerus) occur with increasing frequency with older age. Some fractures may occur with dislocation of the shoulder joint.
Frozen shoulder is stiffness, pain, and limited range of movement in your that may follow an injury. The tissues around the joint stiffen, scar tissue forms, and shoulder movements become difficult and painful.
The shoulder joint has three bones: the shoulder blade (scapula), the collarbone (clavicle), and the upper arm bone (humerus). Injuries to the tissue rim surrounding the shoulder socket can occur from acute trauma or repetitive shoulder motion.
The rotator cuff is a group of four tendons and muscles that converge around the top of the humerus, the upper arm bone above the elbow. Too much stress can cause partial tears and swelling in the tendons of the rotator cuff.
When you have the misfortune of wrenching your shoulder upward and backward, you may dislocate it out of its socket. Most shoulder dislocations happen at the lower front of the shoulder.
Impingement syndrome is a common condition affecting the shoulder and is often seen in aging adults. When an injury occurs to the rotator cuff muscles, which encase the shoulder joint, they respond by swelling.
The shoulder is a ball and socket joint with a large range of movement. Such a mobile joint tends to be more susceptible to injury. The causes of shoulder pain include strains from overexertion, tendonitis from overuse, shoulder joint instability, dislocation, collar or upper arm bone fractures, frozen shoulder, and pinched nerves.
The shoulder separation is an injury to the junction between the collarbone and the shoulder. It after a fall or a sharp blow to the top of the shoulder and is usually sports related.