Practical guidance for managing pain, protecting function, and knowing when to seek additional treatment.
Shoulder pain doesn't always mean surgery is the next step. Most patients manage shoulder conditions for months or years with the right combination of activity modification, therapy, and — when appropriate — medication or injections. This page is a practical guide to living well with a painful shoulder, and to recognizing when it's time to consider more.
The shoulder is the most mobile joint in the body — and that mobility comes at a cost. Unlike the hip or knee, the shoulder relies heavily on surrounding muscles and tendons, not just bone, for its stability.
That means shoulder pain can come from more than one source: the joint surfaces themselves, the rotator cuff tendons that move and stabilize the joint, or both together. Understanding which structure is causing your pain is the first step toward the right treatment.
Several distinct conditions can cause shoulder pain, and they're often treated differently:
The smooth cartilage covering the ball and socket gradually wears away, causing pain and stiffness.
The tendons that move and stabilize the shoulder become inflamed, worn, or torn.
Arthritis that develops after a massive, irreparable rotator cuff tear changes how the joint moves.
The shoulder capsule tightens, causing progressive stiffness and pain that often improves in stages over time.
When arthritis significantly limits function, resurfacing the joint can restore comfortable motion.
A specialized reconstruction for shoulders where the rotator cuff can no longer do its job.
Many patients assume a painful shoulder means avoiding activity altogether. In reality, staying appropriately active — while respecting your shoulder's limits — usually helps more than complete rest.
The goal is finding the activities you can do comfortably, and modifying the ones you can't, rather than giving them up entirely.
One concept I share with patients is what I call "staying in the box."
The safest working area for many painful shoulders is between shoulder width and from the shoulders down toward the navel. Activities within this area rely more heavily on the larger muscles around the arm.
Activities outside this box — especially overhead or away from the body — may place more stress on the painful shoulder or rotator cuff.
This is a general activity-modification concept, not a substitute for individualized medical advice. Your specific limitations should be discussed with your doctor.
Physical therapy is one of the most effective non-surgical treatments for many shoulder conditions.
A good program typically focuses on restoring motion first, then gradually building strength in the muscles that support the shoulder — which can reduce the load carried by an irritated joint or tendon.
Consistency matters more than intensity. Most patients see gradual improvement over weeks, not days.
Anti-inflammatory medications can help manage pain and swelling during flare-ups.
Cortisone injections may also provide temporary relief by calming inflammation in the joint or surrounding structures — though they don't repair damaged cartilage or tendons.
These treatments are tools for managing symptoms while you work on strength and motion, not permanent fixes on their own.
Surgery becomes a reasonable option when pain and loss of function significantly affect your quality of life despite appropriate conservative treatment.
That decision isn't based on X-rays alone — it's based on how much your shoulder is limiting the life you want to live, after therapy, activity modification, and other treatments have been given a fair chance to work.
Not necessarily. Many shoulder conditions improve with activity modification, physical therapy, and medication. Surgery becomes an option when these measures no longer provide meaningful relief and the condition significantly affects daily life.
It's a general activity-modification idea: the safest working area for many painful shoulders is between shoulder width and from the shoulders down toward the navel, relying on larger arm muscles rather than the shoulder joint itself.
No. Arthritis affects the joint surfaces, while rotator cuff disease affects the tendons that move and stabilize the shoulder. They can occur separately or together.
Yes, for many patients. Physical therapy can improve strength, motion, and function, and is often tried before surgery is considered.
If shoulder pain persists, limits your daily activities, or doesn't improve with rest and activity modification, it's reasonable to be evaluated.
Every shoulder is different. If shoulder pain is limiting your life, schedule an appointment to discuss your symptoms and treatment options with Dr. Jadye Kee.