“Can you help with frozen shoulder?”
I have a frozen shoulder. Can you help with a frozen shoulder?
4 Answers
Frozen shoulder or "adhesive capsulitis" is a self-limiting disease that affects range of motion about the shoulder. Its most common in women aged 40-60 and has worse outcomes in people with diabetes or thyroid disease.
Treatment is geared at gaining back normal range of motion. The mainstay of this is aggressive stretching with physical therapy however intra-articular injections (cortisone, PRP) have been showed to expedite the process.
Treatment is geared at gaining back normal range of motion. The mainstay of this is aggressive stretching with physical therapy however intra-articular injections (cortisone, PRP) have been showed to expedite the process.
Yes. I have a very gentle and easy technique for it. It is not quick and not simple however. I use a couple very effective home mobilizations that help as well .
Yes - we take a multi-faceted approach to nonsurgical treatment of frozen shoulder. Adam Redlich, M.D. A+ Athlete - Sports Medicine, LLC 38A Robbinsville-Allentown Rd. Robbinsville, NJ 08691 ph: (609) 223-2286 fax: (609) 223-2288 www.AplusAthlete.com<http://www.AplusAthlete.com> Life's a sport . . . Bring your A+ Game!!!
As for Ear reflexology, I can tell you that yes, a frozen shoulder can be treated. Make sure you visit a good practitioner and go from there to benefit from his/her expertise. It reminds me of a first-class student who treated a client coming to the class to be treated and it was the same situation: a frozen shoulder. That male client was in awe to feel how pain-free he was with one ear point treated and how much his mobility was back to normal. Keep on searching. The answer is near you where a good reflexology can simply take care of it.