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Imaginez comment facile et plaisante serait la vie sans vivre avec toute cette douleur
Choisissez l'option qui vous convient le mieux ...

SI VOUS ÊTES EN DOULEUR ET QUE VOUS VOULEZ VOUS SENTIR MIEUX, NOUS SOMMES LÀ POUR VOUS! NOUS TRAVAILLONS AVEC DES GENS QUI DÉSIRENT TROUVER UNE SOLUTION À LEUR PROBLÈME ET QUI SONT ENGAGÉS À AMÉLIORER LEUR SANTÉ ET LEUR QUALITÉ DE LA VIE.

SI VOUS VOULEZ PRENDRE CONTRÔLE DE VOTRE DOULEUR ET RETROUVER LE PLAISIR DE VIVRE, CLIQUEZ SUR UNE DES OPTIONS GRATUITES CI-DESSUS ET COMMENÇONS LA CONVERSATION!

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Ça peut sembler fou ...mais oui, on vous offre des CONSEILS GRATUITS pour que vous puissiez traiter votre blessure et vous sentir mieux par rapport à votre travail
OUI ! Je veux mon rapport GRATUIT

Dites nous où vous avez mal pour qu'on puisse vous aider:

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Douleur au dos
Apprenez des façons faciles pour avoir un dos plus fort afin que vous puissiez travailler et avoir du plaisir sans soucis. Ebook
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Douleur au coude
Apprenez des techniques rapides pour retrouver la force à la main. Ebook
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Douleur au genou
Apprenez des conseils pour marcher ou courir plus loin et plus longtemps avec moins de douleur au genou. Ebook
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Douleur à l'épaule
Soulagez la douleur à l'épaule pour vous en servir avec confiance à nouveau. Ebook

For my frozen shoulder, is it true that I don't need any special treatment?

Q: The nurse practitioner I am seeing for a frozen shoulder told me it is a "self-limiting" problem and I don't need any special treatment. Just wait and the body will self-correct. Is this really true?

A: Many adults (mostly women) between the ages of 40 and 60 years of age develop shoulder pain and stiffness called adhesive capsulitis. Sometimes this condition is referred to as "frozen shoulder." But, in fact, adhesive capsulitis and frozen shoulder are two separate problems.

As the name suggests, adhesive capsulitis affects the fibrous ligaments that surround the shoulder forming the capsule. The condition referred to as a frozen shoulder usually doesn't involve the capsule.

A true frozen shoulder might have some joint capsule changes but the shoulder stiffness is really coming from something outside the joint. Some of the conditions associated with frozen shoulder include rotator cuff tears, biceps tendinitis, and arthritis. When the normally loose parts of the joint capsule stick together the shoulder's ability to move is limited causing the shoulder to get stuck or "freeze".

The natural history of either condition: frozen shoulder and adhesive capsulitis (what normally happens with this condition may depend on what is causing the problem. In many cases, there is a gradual improvement over a long period of time (12 to 42 months).

Treatment may speed up improvements to less than one-month, which is why many patients are referred to physiotherapy. Early goals in rehab are to reduce pain and interrupt the inflammatory cycle. Treatments are directed at getting the muscles to relax in order to help you regain the motion and function of your shoulder. This can be done with modalities such as ultrasound and/or electrical stimulation, the use of cold, and iontophoresis. Iontophoresis is a way to push medications through the skin directly into the inflamed tissue.

The therapist will address the capsular tightness and adhesions. Joint mobilization techniques are used to keep the joint sliding and gliding smoothly and to prevent scar tissue from forming. Keeping full shoulder and scapular (shoulder blade) motion is a priority. Special stretching techniques are used to prevent pain that could cause muscles around the shoulder to tighten even more.

Unless the nurse practitioner has a specific reason why physiotherapy would not be helpful for you, this type of treatment is usually a critical part of recovery from frozen shoulder (or adhesive capsulitis). Besides hands-on therapy, you will be given exercises and stretches to do as part of a home program. You may need therapy treatments for three to four months before you get full shoulder motion and function back but in many cases, direct treatment speeds up the recovery process and save patients months of pain, loss of motion, and altered shoulder function.

Reference: Sang-Yeol Ma, PhD, et al. Effects of Whole-Body Cryotherapy in the Management of Adhesive Capsulitis of the Shoulder. In Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. January 2013. Vol. 94. No. 1. Pp. 9-16.

Physio Max provides services for physiotherapy in Bathurst.

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