Rotator Cuff Tendinopathy
What is Rotator Cuff Tendinopathy?
The rotator cuff (RTC) is a group of four muscles and their tendons. The supraspinatus, infraspinatus, subscapularis and teres minor surround and stabilise the shoulder joint. Together they control shoulder rotation and assist with lifting the arm. The RTC muscles are essential for all overhead and reaching activities. Rotator cuff tendinopathy is degeneration and failed healing within one or more of these tendons.
Rotator cuff problems exist on a spectrum from mild tendinopathy through partial-thickness tears to full-thickness rotator cuff tears. Hand Therapy is highly effective for all RTC conditions and is essential following surgical repair. Specialist assessment and treatment addresses the root causes of the condition and drives lasting recovery.
What causes Rotator Cuff Tendinopathy?
- Repetitive overhead activities: painting, plastering, swimming, throwing and racquet sports
- Age-related tendon degeneration: rotator cuff changes are present in the majority of adults over 60
- Poor shoulder complex control: causing altered shoulder mechanics and increased tendon load
- Shoulder impingement: compression of a shoulder tendon or tendons
- Sudden overload: an unguarded lift or fall onto an outstretched arm
- Shoulder instability: negatively loads the rotator cuff tendons
Signs & symptoms
- Aching pain at the outer side of the shoulder and upper arm, often worse at night
- Pain on overhead movement: lifting the arm above shoulder height
- Shoulder weakness affecting performance of daily tasks
- Difficulty with activities behind the back: fastening a bra, reaching into a back pocket
How Hand Therapy can help
Ms Razo provides specialist assessment and evidence-based treatment for Rotator Cuff Tendinopathy. Following a thorough initial assessment, a personalised treatment plan will be developed to address your specific needs and goals.
A graded Hand Therapy programme targeting the specific affected tendons is the cornerstone of rotator cuff tendinopathy management. Ms Razo designs an individualised programme matched to tendon capacity at each stage of healing.
Poor shoulder girdle biomechanics is a key driver of rotator cuff tendinopathy. Ms Razo assesses the entire shoulder girdle to address the underlying biomechanical factors contributing to the condition.
Identifying and modifying the activities driving the tendon overload is essential to allow tendon recovery. Ms Razo provides practical advice to incorporate into your daily routine aimed at improving your symptoms.
Following rotator cuff repair, Ms Razo provides specialist post-operative rehabilitation coordinated with the operating surgeon. The programme respects the healing tissue while progressively restoring shoulder movement, strength as well as function through a structured, phased approach.
Frequently asked questions
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Rotator cuff tendinopathy refers to degeneration within the tendon without a structural defect through it. A full-thickness tear is a complete defect through the entire tendon. Tendinopathy and partial tears are managed non-operatively with Hand Therapy in most cases. Large full-thickness tears in younger, active patients are more likely to require surgical repair.
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No. Clinical assessment by an experienced specialist can diagnose rotator cuff tendinopathy with high accuracy. MRI is the preferred imaging modality when a structural tear is suspected, when symptoms are not responding to treatment as expected or when surgical management is being considered. Ms Razo can arrange imaging referrals, where clinically indicated.
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With appropriate management, most patients with rotator cuff tendinopathy experience significant improvement within 6–12 weeks of starting a progressive loading programme. Full recovery and return to overhead sport or heavy manual work may take a number of months. Cases that have been present for longer before treatment tend to take longer to resolve.
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Yes. Complete rest is not recommended. The goal is load management: modifying rather than eliminating activity while introducing a graded rehabilitaiton programme. Heavy overhead loading and positions that provoke sharp pain should be avoided initially. However, general fitness and lower limb exercise should be maintained throughout rehabilitation.
Ready to take
the first step?
Book a consultation with Ms Razo and receive a thorough assessment, precise diagnosis and a personal treatment plan.