Travelover
Elite Member
This is more common than I thought. Yep sleeping can be bad, can't sleep at all on my left side (bad shoulder side), can't raise my arm even level at the side. First thought it was torn rotator cup or arthritis, turned out to be neither.
Sounds like standard exercises for therapy, although have not been told to hang from the rafters yet.
Surgery is scheduled for this Friday afternoon. I will let you know how it goes.
It is your decision, but I was told that it is a temporary condition that will self heal with therapy. And in my case, it did, but it took months.
Frozen shoulder: Treatments and drugs - MayoClinic.com
Surgical and other procedures
Most frozen shoulders get better on their own within 12 to 18 months. For persistent symptoms, your doctor may suggest:
Steroid injections. Injecting corticosteroids into your shoulder joint may help decrease pain and improve shoulder mobility.
Joint distension. Injecting sterile water into the joint capsule can help stretch the tissue and make it easier to move the joint.
Shoulder manipulation. In this procedure, you receive a general anesthetic so you'll be unconscious and feel no pain. Then the doctor moves your shoulder joint in different directions, to help loosen the tightened tissue. Depending on the amount of force used, this procedure can cause bone fractures.
Surgery. If nothing else has helped, you may be a candidate for surgery to remove scar tissue and adhesions from inside your shoulder joint. Doctors usually perform this surgery arthroscopically, with lighted, tubular instruments inserted through small incisions around your joint.