Medically reviewed by Subrat Bahinipati, PT, DPT — Co-founder, Synergy Therapeutic Group
Shoulder pain is discomfort or limited motion in the shoulder joint and surrounding structures, ranging from sharp acute pain to chronic stiffness that limits everyday function.
It affects approximately 18-26% of adults at any given time, with rotator cuff disorders, bursitis, and chronic compensations from neck or thoracic stiffness as common drivers. The most common signs are pain during overhead motion, difficulty reaching behind the back, night pain that disturbs sleep, and weakness when lifting or pushing.
Unlike conventional approaches that treat the shoulder in isolation, Synergy Therapeutic Group treats shoulder pain by assessing the entire kinetic chain — neck, thoracic spine, scapula, and core — because the shoulder rarely fails alone.
Shoulder pain is not something you have to live with — and it is rarely just the shoulder. At Synergy Therapeutic Group, we find the pattern that is keeping it there.
Because we use our shoulders for almost every movement, even a small restriction has a big impact on daily life. Reaching the top shelf. Putting on a jacket. Sleeping on your side. Driving. Lifting a child. When the shoulder hurts, the whole day starts working around it.
Most people who come to us with shoulder pain have already tried something. Massage. A cortisone injection. Standard physical therapy. They got some relief, but the pain came back — or it moved. That is because the shoulder rarely hurts in isolation. The neck, the upper back, the rotator cuff, the fascia of the chest and arm, and the nerves that feed the shoulder are all part of the same system. Treat one piece, miss the others, and the pattern keeps regenerating.
Why shoulder pain keeps coming back
Shoulder pain that lingers usually has more than one source. A rotator cuff strain that never fully healed. Years of forward-shoulder posture from a desk or phone. An old fall that changed how the shoulder blade glides on the rib cage. Fascial restrictions through the pectoral muscles that pull the shoulder forward and rotate it inward. Nerve impingement from the cervical spine that radiates down into the arm.
Many patients have been told they have a “rotator cuff problem” or “frozen shoulder” or “impingement.” Those names describe what is happening. They do not always explain why it started, why it persists, or what to do about the chain of things that drive it.
A patient’s story
Patrick came to us with chronic shoulder pain he had given up on. He had tried other approaches. He had resigned himself to living with the pain and the weakness.
I had resigned myself to chronic pain and weakness in my shoulder. Synergy was unphased by my condition and even began healing other parts of my body that I didn’t know were causing me issues. Synergy has made me stronger, more confident and without pain.
— Patrick Soule, Synergy patient, Carbondale, IL
Two things in Patrick’s story matter. First, the shoulder pain resolved — even though he had given up. Second, we found and treated other patterns in his body he had not connected to the shoulder. That is what root-cause work looks like. The shoulder is the symptom. The pattern is the cause.
The shoulder is connected to the neck — always
The nerves that supply the shoulder and arm come out of the cervical spine. Tension or restriction in the neck almost always feeds into the shoulder. Patients with chronic shoulder pain frequently have a neck component they have not noticed — until we evaluate it.
And it works the other way too. Patients who come in primarily for neck pain often develop or already have shoulder restrictions from the same fascial chain. When we treat one, we evaluate the other. It saves time and gives better results.
How we treat shoulder pain at Synergy
At Synergy Therapeutic Group, every shoulder evaluation starts with a thorough history and movement assessment — not just of the shoulder, but of the neck, upper back, ribs, and breath mechanics. We look at the chain.
Then we build a treatment plan that combines several approaches based on what your shoulder actually needs:
- Myofascial release — to release the fascial restrictions in the chest, shoulder, neck, and upper back that pull the shoulder forward and rotate it inward
- Manual therapy — to restore movement at the shoulder joint, scapula, and cervical spine
- Dry needling — to release deep muscle trigger points in the rotator cuff and surrounding tissue
- Therapeutic laser — to support healing in the rotator cuff, tendons, and inflamed tissues
- Movement and postural retraining — to teach the shoulder a new pattern, so the pain does not come back
Most patients notice meaningful improvement in their first few visits. Many gain measurable range of motion in the first session. The goal is not just pain relief — it is a shoulder that moves well, feels strong, and stays that way.
Another shoulder pain story
Not every shoulder case looks the same. Here is a second story from a different shoulder pain patient with a different path through treatment:
Yet another shoulder pain story
Shoulder pain shows up in many ways. Here is one more story — a different presentation, the same root-cause work:
Conditions connected to shoulder pain
- Chronic neck pain — the cervical spine feeds the nerves and fascia of the shoulder
- Back pain — upper back patterns directly affect shoulder mechanics
- Headaches and migraines — shoulder and upper neck tension often refer to the head
- Arthritis pain — the shoulder joint is a common site of degenerative change
- Post-surgical rehabilitation — rotator cuff and labral repairs need targeted recovery
Recommended Reading
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Frequently asked questions
How do I know if my shoulder pain is a rotator cuff tear?
Suspect rotator cuff involvement if you have pain reaching overhead, sleeping on that side, or lifting the arm against gravity — particularly if you also feel weakness rather than just pain. Many rotator cuff cases respond to physical therapy without surgery. An evaluation distinguishes tear from tendinitis from impingement, and from referred pain that mimics rotator cuff.
Can frozen shoulder really be reversed?
Yes. Adhesive capsulitis (the clinical name for frozen shoulder) is a combination of capsular restriction, muscular guarding, and fascial adhesion — all of which respond to the right manual therapy and movement work. The textbook says 12 to 18 months to resolve on its own; with focused treatment, the timeline is often much shorter.
Should I get a cortisone shot or try physical therapy first?
Most patients benefit from starting with physical therapy. Cortisone reduces inflammation temporarily but does not address the mechanical pattern driving the inflammation, and repeated injections weaken tendon tissue over time. PT plus an injection at the right moment is often more effective than either alone.
How long should I wait to start PT after a shoulder injury?
For most non-surgical injuries, sooner is better. Waiting allows compensations to lock in. Even in the acute phase, gentle work can preserve motion and reduce the long-term recovery time. After surgery, your surgeon will give a specific timeline — typically a few days to a few weeks.
Is it okay to keep using my arm if movement hurts?
Gentle, pain-modified use is usually better than complete immobility. Avoiding all movement causes the shoulder to stiffen and the surrounding muscles to weaken, which worsens the long-term outcome. Sharp pain or movement that significantly worsens symptoms is a signal to back off — and an evaluation tells you exactly where the line is.
This page was medically reviewed by Subrat Bahinipati, PT, DPT, who has practiced physical therapy for more than 32 years and specializes in chronic and complex musculoskeletal conditions. He is the co-founder of Synergy Therapeutic Group in Carbondale, Illinois.
Can rotator cuff tears heal without surgery?
Yes — about 80% of partial rotator cuff tears improve with physical therapy alone. Even complete tears in older adults often respond well to non-surgical treatment. Surgery becomes the right choice when there is loss of function, weakness that affects daily life, or a young athlete who needs full overhead strength. We help you decide.
How long does shoulder pain take to heal with physical therapy?
Most shoulder conditions improve significantly within 4–6 weeks of consistent physical therapy. Full recovery — meaning back to all overhead activities pain-free — typically takes 8–12 weeks for moderate issues, longer for complex tears. The key is consistency: skipping home exercises is the number one reason recovery stalls.
Why does my shoulder hurt at night?
Night shoulder pain is one of the strongest signs of rotator cuff irritation or impingement. When you lie down, gravity stops supporting the shoulder, the tendons compress, and inflammation peaks at night. We address the root cause — but in the short term, sleeping on the OTHER side with a pillow hugging the painful arm often helps.


