Last week we addressed a letter from Jana who sustained a shoulder
injury after falling when ice skating. We discussed that her condition
may be a shoulder bursitis, adhesive capsulitis, or a rotator cuff
syndrome. Last week we discussed the pathology of a shoulder bursitis.
This week we will be discussing adhesive capsulitis.
Adhesive capsulitis or frozen shoulder is a condition in which a
patient has severe limitation in the shoulder joint. This condition
may come from a fall, as in the case of Jana, or could come on for
no apparent cause and effect relationship.
When a patient has this
condition, their complaint is more of a restriction verses pain.
That is, the doctor or patient is unable to raise their extremity due
to adhesions in the joint capsule that limits their mobility. This
is in contrast to a shoulder bursitis and rotator cuff syndrome.
With
a shoulder bursitis and rotator cuff syndrome, the doctor may be
able to raise a patient's arm during the examination, even though
it may be painful to the patient. A frozen shoulder could take weeks
to months to rehabilitate, even with the best of treatment. When a
patient has this condition, identifying and treating this early on
could greatly shorten the duration of the impairment. Next week we
will be discussing rotator cuff syndromes.
Shoulder Injury Articles
Part 1 - Bursitis Part
2 - Adhesive Capsulitis
Part
3 - Rotator Cuff Part
4 - Impingement
Syndrome