Showing posts with label Subacromial impingement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Subacromial impingement. Show all posts

Sunday, October 11, 2020

Are Shoulder Stabilization Exercises Useful?

Your physiotherapist or trainer may have taught you the following exercise(s) to help with shoulder pain. You may have been asked to bring your elbows back while squeezing your shoulder blades together behind you. You were told that you should feel the muscles between your shoulder blades activate and your chest stretching or opening up. This is also to help position your scapula(e) for an improved posture.

R shoulder
I must confess that I, too, have been guilty of teaching this in the past. Fortunately, that's a long time ago! I used to to instruct patients to do scapula (or shoulder blade) stabilization exercises when they come in to our clinic complaining of shoulder impingement. This is also known as subacromial pain syndrome. Sub acromial means all structures below the acromion that can cause problems. Please see picture above and below.

What are some common scapular stabilization exercises? Anything that emphasizes retraction (drawing back)  and depression (bringing lower) of the scapular. Like what I described in the first paragraph of the article.

Well, not all cases of subacromial pain patients will benefit from doing the above exercise. Not according to a recently published randomized controlled study (Hotta et al, 2020).

The objective of that study was to determine if adding scapular stabilization exercises especially retraction and depression of the scapular will help patients with subacromial pain. 60 subjects were randomly divided into two groups. One group did strengthening exercises for muscles around the scapular while the other did the strengthening as well as stabilization exercises for 8 weeks (3x daily).

Results at the end of their study after 8 weeks and even 8 weeks after showed no differences between the 2 groups. The researchers concluded that adding scapular stabilization exercises that emphasized scapular retraction and depression to a general strengthening exercise for muscles around the scapular did not add any benefits to pain, muscle strength or range of motion.

Now after 21 years of treating patients with shoulder pain, my approach has changed dramatically. I now look at a person's shoulder together with the ribcage, neck, spine, hips, feet. I look at how a patient's body is sitting in space and how it moves through space. All while assessing the balance of the structures around their joints. I see which structures need to be worked on by me and which the patient would need to tone and strengthen on their own with specific instructions.  

Reference 

Hotta GH, De Asiss Couto AG et al (2020). Effects Of Adding Scapular Stabilization Exercises To A Periscapular Strengthening Exercise Program In Patients With Subacromial Pain Syndrome: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Muscu Sci Pract 49: 102171. DOI: 10.1016/j.msksp.2020.102171.

Sunday, May 21, 2017

Shoulder Pain From Swimming? Treat Your Neck

Yes, your shoulder pain is coming from your neck
I had a really interesting case this past week. A patient who's an elite swimmer comes in to our clinic complaining of shoulder pain.

An ultra sound scan and MRI that was done confirms the diagnosis of shoulder subacromial impingement (usually the tendon of the supraspinatus muscle gets irritated from hand above head activities under the acromium).

The doctor my patient saw the the Singapore Sports Institute suggested a steroid (or cortisone) injection to "solve the problem".

R shoulder impingement
Well, the Physiotherapists reading this must be thinking "yeah, what's the big deal". All elite swimmers (or athletes involved with overhead sports like badminton, tennis etc) always get shoulder pain from subacromial impingement at some point of other in their sporting career.

Well, here's the thing, I got the swimmer better just be treating the swimmer's neck. This swimmer did not have any neck pain or signs of nerve root irritation.

I've seen other cases of shoulder impingement when the patient had obvious clues suggesting it was the neck and/ or nerve root irritation causing the shoulder impingement.

This swimmer did not have any neck pain or nerve root irritation signs. The patient did have a forward head posture which can contribute to a C5 nerve root involvement.

Similar to the article referenced below, the swimmer got better very quickly just by cervical retraction, as taught by Gwen Jull. Of course treatment also included other things and not just cervical retraction.

My swimmer went back to full training in three days with no recurrence of symptoms. Good thing my patient said no to the steroid or cortisone injection.

Reference

Pheasant S (2016). Cervical Contribution To Functional Shoulder Impingement: Two Case Reports. Int J Sports Phys Ther. 1196): 980-991.