Sports Medicine
If you’ve had a sports-related injury or have a condition that’s keeping you out of the game, our sports medicine expert physicians and specialists are here to help you get back to doing the things you love.
Rotator cuff tendinitis is a common injury in athletes who use overhead throwing or lifting motions. It may also impact people who do repetitive lifting or overhead motions, such as wallpaper hanging, construction or painting.
Our board-certified, fellowship-trained shoulder specialists provide comprehensive care from evaluation through recovery for repetitive motion and overuse shoulder injuries.
Your arm is kept in your shoulder socket by your rotator cuff, a collection of muscles and tendons (cord-like bands of tissue that connect muscles to bone) that stabilize the shoulder. The rotator cuff helps to lift and rotate the arm and to stabilize the ball of the shoulder within the joint.
Rotator cuff tendinitis occurs when the tendons and muscles that help move your shoulder joint become inflamed or irritated. This can be the result of shoulder impingement. Rotator cuff tendinitis can develop over time as the result of a minor injury, or as a result of repetitive motions that lead to inflammation.
Doctors may use different terms to describe a tendon injury including tendinitis, tendinosis or tendinopathy. Many common sports afflictions, including tennis elbow and golfer's elbow, swimmer's shoulder and jumper's knee are forms of tendinitis/tendinosis.
Tendinitis causes pain throughout the shoulder joint extending as far as the elbow that may be manageable at first but typically worsens over time.
Other symptoms may include:
During arthroscopic surgery, the doctor will examine the rim and the biceps tendon. If the injury is confined to the rim itself, without involving the tendon, the shoulder is still stable.
Learn more about the total shoulder joint replacement and reverse total shoulder replacement surgeries offered and Main Line Health.
Joint distension, or hydrodilitation, involves injection of sterile water into the joint to expand the area and help the adhesions loosen and pull away so the shoulder is no longer restricted.
Minimally invasive rotator cuff surgery is our expertise. Find out from the orthopaedic experts at Main Line Health about the latest treatment options to repair a rotator cuff tear.
Arthroscopic surgery, also known simply as arthroscopy and arthroplasty are two minimally invasive surgical types. A traditional or open surgical procedure is one that opens up an area fully. Minimally-invasive procedures encompass both small incision surgeries and those with minimally invasive techniques that do not open up an area fully. Arthroscopic surgery
Each inpatient and outpatient physical therapy rehab is individually designed and administered by a licensed physical therapist who consistently guides you from that first visit all the way through recovery.
Some orthopaedic conditions are first treated with non-surgical procedures followed by surgery as the next step.
Your doctor may recommend epidural steroid injections after other noninvasive treatment approaches have failed to relieve your pain.
If you’ve had a sports-related injury or have a condition that’s keeping you out of the game, our sports medicine expert physicians and specialists are here to help you get back to doing the things you love.