What is a rotator cuff injury?
A rotator cuff injury is a strain or tear in the group of
tendons and muscles that hold your shoulder joint together
and help move your shoulder.
How does it occur?
A rotator cuff injury may result from:
- poor head and shoulder posture, especially in older
people
- using your arm to break a fall
- falling onto your arm
- lifting a heavy object
- normal wear and tear in an older person
- use of your shoulder in sports with a repetitive overhead
movement, such as swimming, baseball (mainly pitchers),
football, and tennis, which gradually strains the tendon
- manual labor such as painting, plastering, raking leaves,
or housework.
What are the symptoms?
The symptoms of a torn rotator cuff are:
- arm and shoulder pain
- shoulder weakness
- shoulder tenderness
- loss of shoulder movement, especially overhead.
How is it diagnosed?
Your healthcare provider will examine you and check your
shoulder for pain, tenderness, and loss of motion as you move
your arm in all directions. Your provider will ask if your
shoulder pain began suddenly or gradually. You may have an
X-ray to make sure there are not any fractures or bone spurs.
Based on these results, you may have other tests or
procedures right away or later, such as:
- magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which creates images of
your shoulder and surrounding structures with sound waves
- an arthrogram, which is an X-ray or MRI that is taken
after a special dye has been injected into your shoulder
joint to outline its soft structures
- arthroscopy, a surgical procedure in which a small
instrument is inserted into your shoulder joint so your
provider can look directly at your rotator cuff.
What is the treatment?
A tendon in your shoulder can be inflamed, partially torn,
or completely torn. What is done about it depends on how
torn it is and how much it hurts.
If your tear is a minor one, it can be left to heal by
itself if it does not interfere with your everyday
activities. Your treatment plan should include:
- proper sitting posture, in which your head and shoulders
are balanced
- rest for your shoulder, which means avoiding strenuous
activity or any overhead motion that causes pain
- ice packs at least once a day, and preferably 2 or 3 times
a day
- doing the exercises your healthcare provider gives you
- anti-inflammatory drugs. Adults aged 65 years and older
should not take non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medicine
for more than 7 days without their healthcare provider's
approval.
- possibly physical therapy to help you learn exercises you
can do at home to stretch or strengthen your shoulder.
If you have a bad tear, you may need to have it repaired by
arthroscopy. Arthroscopy can be used to perform surgery on
a joint as well as to see inside the joint. The rough edges
of a torn tendon can be trimmed and left to heal. Larger
tears can be stitched back together. After surgery, your
treatment plan will include physical therapy to strengthen
your shoulder as it heals.
How long will the effects last?
Full recovery depends on what is torn and how it is treated.
When can I return to my normal activities?
Everyone recovers from an injury at a different rate.
Return to your activities will be determined by how soon
your shoulder recovers, not by how many days or weeks it has
been since your injury has occurred. In general, the longer
you have symptoms before you start treatment, the longer it
will take to get better. The goal of rehabilitation is to
return you to your normal activities as soon as is safely
possible. If you return too soon you may worsen your
injury.
You may safely return to your normal activities when:
- Your injured shoulder has full range of motion without
pain.
- Your injured shoulder has regained normal strength
compared to the uninjured shoulder.
What can be done to help prevent this from recurring?
The best way to prevent a recurrence is to strengthen your
shoulder muscles and keep them in peak condition with
shoulder exercises.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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