Shoulder Pathology and Disorders
Shoulder pathology covers the disorders of the glenohumeral and surrounding joints — most prominently rotator cuff disease, subacromial pain, adhesive capsulitis, instability, and glenohumeral osteoarthritis. The shoulder trades stability for an exceptional range of motion, and many of its conditions reflect the demands placed on the rotator cuff and surrounding soft tissues that stabilise a shallow ball-and-socket joint.
Definition
Shoulder pathology and disorders comprise the degenerative, traumatic, inflammatory, and instability conditions affecting the glenohumeral joint, rotator cuff, subacromial bursa, and adjacent structures.
Scope
This topic surveys the common structural and degenerative conditions of the shoulder, the anatomy of the rotator cuff and subacromial space, and the recurring challenge that imaging abnormalities are frequently present in people without symptoms. It is a reference-educational overview of shoulder disorders, not a treatment protocol.
Core questions
- What are the principal categories of shoulder disorder — cuff disease, instability, stiffness, and arthritis?
- How does the shoulder's mobility-stability trade-off shape its pathology?
- How common are rotator cuff abnormalities in people without symptoms?
- What does trial evidence say about the benefit of subacromial decompression for shoulder pain?
Key concepts
- Rotator cuff
- Subacromial impingement
- Rotator cuff tear
- Adhesive capsulitis (frozen shoulder)
- Glenohumeral instability
- Glenohumeral osteoarthritis
- Asymptomatic imaging findings
Mechanisms
The glenohumeral joint achieves a wide range of motion at the cost of bony stability, relying on the rotator cuff, capsule, and labrum to keep the humeral head centred. Rotator cuff disease is thought to result from a combination of intrinsic tendon degeneration and extrinsic compression in the subacromial space, and cuff tears become more frequent with age. A central observation is that rotator cuff tears and other abnormalities are common on magnetic resonance imaging of shoulders that have no symptoms, increasing with age, which complicates linking a finding to a patient's pain (Sher 1995). The historical model that subacromial impingement drives pain and that surgical decompression relieves it has been challenged by placebo-controlled trial evidence (Beard 2018).
Clinical relevance
Shoulder disorders are a frequent reason for musculoskeletal consultation, and the discordance between imaging findings and symptoms is central to interpreting the evidence on them. The CSAW trial illustrates how placebo-controlled surgical trials reshape understanding of which interventions add benefit. This entry describes how shoulder conditions are categorised and studied and is not a basis for individual treatment decisions.
Epidemiology
Rotator cuff abnormalities rise steeply with age and are frequently present in asymptomatic shoulders, so prevalence estimates depend heavily on whether symptoms or imaging are used to define disease (Sher 1995). Shoulder pain is among the more common regional musculoskeletal complaints across populations.
History
Twentieth-century shoulder surgery was strongly influenced by the impingement model, which framed subacromial mechanical contact as a driver of cuff pain and motivated decompression surgery. Imaging studies of asymptomatic shoulders (Sher 1995) and later placebo-controlled trials (Beard 2018) prompted a re-examination of that model and of the role of surgery in subacromial pain.
Debates
- Does arthroscopic subacromial decompression relieve shoulder pain?
- The placebo-controlled CSAW trial found no clinically important benefit of arthroscopic subacromial decompression over placebo surgery or no treatment, challenging a long-standing rationale for the procedure.
- How should asymptomatic cuff findings be interpreted?
- Because rotator cuff abnormalities are common in shoulders without symptoms and increase with age, attributing a patient's pain to an imaging finding requires caution.
Related topics
Seminal works
- sher-1995
- beard-2018
Frequently asked questions
- Are rotator cuff tears always painful?
- No. Rotator cuff tears and other abnormalities are commonly found on imaging of shoulders that have no symptoms, and they become more frequent with age, so a tear on imaging is not always the cause of a person's pain.
- Does surgery to decompress the subacromial space help shoulder pain?
- A placebo-controlled randomised trial (CSAW) found no clinically important benefit of arthroscopic subacromial decompression compared with placebo surgery or no treatment, which has changed how the procedure is viewed.