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Frozen Shoulder

Shoulder

Group Yoga Class

What actually is a Frozen Shoulder?

Lets start with what it isn’t because there is an awful lot of confusion about this condition and we don’t even all call it by the same name! A lot of medical professionals use the name Adhesive Capsulitis but this is historical and completely wrong for two reasons. The first is that there are no adhesions in a Frozen Shoulder and the second is that there is no inflammation (the ‘itis’ bit means inflammation). So let’s stick to Frozen Shoulder.


Why did I get it? I don’t remember doing anything to it.

I believe there is always a trigger that causes your shoulder to freeze but it doesn’t have to be anything dramatic and often that trigger was pulled weeks or even months before you realise there is something wrong with your shoulder. So reaching over the back seat of the car to pick up a bag; pulling down a garage door – something as simple as that can cause it. The shoulder can also freeze up for a more obvious reason; after surgery on the upper limb; after a fall and that sort of thing and we call that Secondary Frozen Shoulder.


How do I know if it is a Frozen Shoulder?

As a shoulder surgeon the biggest problem I face is that so many people with a painful shoulder or a stiff shoulder are told that they have a Frozen Shoulder when in fact they don’t.


Ok. The way to know that you definitely have a Frozen Shoulder is to try this. Lie flat on the floor and bring your straight arms up and over your head towards the carpet behind you. If the good hand gets there and the bad hand doesn’t then you have a stiff shoulder. Bring your arms down to your side and bend your elbows to 90 degrees and then try and swing your hands out sideways and see if there is a difference between the two sides.  Again, if there is a difference then you have a stiff shoulder. The chances are that this is  Frozen Shoulder but remember –  you HAVE to have a normal x-ray before anyone can say you have a Frozen Shoulder.


Those are the medical definitions and unless you have limited passive anterior elevation and/or limited passive external rotation in the presence of a normal x-ray you cannot and should not be told you have a Frozen Shoulder.


How does it affect me?

It doesn’t start out being frozen straight away. It usually starts gradually and insidiously with pain using the arm over head height, pain at night, catching pain dressing – that sort of thing. And this is very like, if not identical to, Tendonitis so in the early stages it can be hard to tell the two apart.


As the weeks and months pass the shoulder starts to freeze or lose movement –the Freezing Phase. The good bit about this is that often the pain lessens as the shoulder fully freezes up  so that after a couple of months you have a stiff shoulder but one that doesn’t hurt. This is the Frozen Phase and the one that can last a very long time.


It’s not all good news in the Frozen Phase though. That agonising, tears in the eyes, pain you get if you jar the shoulder or fling it out quickly (to stop something falling off the desk perhaps) or someone grabs your arm and pulls it: sound familiar? That is still going to happen and it doesn’t matter what pain-killers you are taking because nothing will stop that sudden movement being very, very painful.


And then one day you will realise that you have been able to reach something you couldn’t the week before whether that is a shelf, the car seat-belt or the back of your head. And at that point your shoulder is entering the Defrosting Phase and you are on the home straight.


No one can predict exactly how long each of these phases will last. In fact no one can predict even approximately how long each will last. But once you start getting the movement back then you know you will be getting your life back again.

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