The Best Way to Recover from Rotator Cuff Surgery
Part 4: Surgery:
Surgery for a rotator cuff tear, involves reattaching part of the tendon to the arm bone or humerus. A partial repair is described as a department surgery.
What is the most common procedure?
There are 3 types of rotator cuff repair:
- Open:
- This is the original repair technique and involves a large opening in order to deal with large and complicated tears to the rotator cuff
- Arthroscopic:
- Less invasive than an open repair, arthroscopic repairs have small incisions and the surgeon views your shoulder on a monitor to perform the repair
- Mini-Open:
- A newer technique with a smaller incision than open, but large enough to allow the surgeon to view your shoulder directly, rather than on a screen.
What’s a Rotator Cuff repair with tenodesis?
Often, when you tear your rotator cuff, you also injure your biceps tendon. If the injury to your biceps is significant enough, a tenodesis may be performed. This involves repositioning the biceps tendon on a different part of the humerus (arm bone) to reduce stress on it during activity.
What does rehab look like for all this?
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- If you have one or more of the following:
- Fit and Healthy
- have a small tear
- have a good understanding/experience of strength and conditioning
- Then it will likely be 3-6 sessions over 12-24 weeks
- If you have one or more of the following:
- Sedentary
- Medium to large tear
- Not much experience with strength and conditioning
- Then it would likely take a little longer: 12-30 sessions over 12-36 weeks
- If you have one or more of the following:
Why?
- Being strong, fit and healthy means your body can tolerate more stress and it recovers from stress quicker and less painfully.
- This is why we have recommended the above timelines for recovery.
- A fit, healthy person who knows how to train, has a higher baseline than a sedentary person and therefore doesn’t go as far backwards following injury-meaning they recover quicker.
Here’s what ideal rehab looks like: