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I too suffer from shoulder pain on the left side! Its alot more involved than just my shoulder but my whle shoulder blade and the trapeseist muscels hurt and are as hard as a rock!I have had neck surgery for my problems but have always had all this pain on my left side ,then it spreads to my whole back and neck!
Anyway,I know we don't have the same issues I just thought i'd reply and let you know I understand the pain and frustration for a problem with no cure!
God Speed,77grace
Do you have pain in both shoulders or just one?
I have Fibromyalgia, disc disease in my neck, and migraines. I get along okay. I am a bit older than you at 62.
The researchers will find answers to our pain, don't even think about living with it the rest of your life. Try and live more day to day. It makes it easier.
Take care, Annette
Working on retraining the different muscle groups that stabilize your shoulders can go a long way in improving the pain, mobility, posture, and strength of your shoulders and arms. This can be a tricky business and it would be great if you could work with a rehabilitation specialist who really understands shoulders for an extended period of time. Interestingly, I just worked with a young gentleman who also had several surgeries on one of his shoulders and had limited movement of it with lots of pain. After several weeks of intense rehabilitation at my center, he is now off of pain medications for the first time in 10 years, can lift his arm overhead, and is doing pullups. While this approach may not work for each person's situation, I think it would be worth talking to your doctors about setting up a very thoughtful and comprehensive rehabilitation plan for you.
I am in college again to retrain; however, all my meds make concentrating difficult (gotta love multiple narc. Rx's for pain then another narc Rx for the narcolepsy?). My TENS (IM) helps and soon I will be blessed by the return of my Game Ready unit. I was a Drill Sergeant with the Army and wish I could be rid of all the Rx's (and machines) so I could be active again, I'm only 36 and way too young to be stopped by chronic pain. I hope the long arm of the net and WebMD can find me relief (none my 2nd, 3rd ... opinions show hope).
Worse yet I have to fight comp for everything!
What has been the single most helpful thing for me has been a hot tub although it must be a top of the line model because I have to have very powerful jets in a position to massage my shoulder area. Being able to use the hot tub, especially before bed, kept me functioning for years and has been an incredible help during recovery from my surgeries (getting in before doing my physical therapy).
I will point out that a lot of the pain that seems to be joint pain can actually be from soft tissue. Since I have a full joint replacement, I can have NO pain from the joint since it has no nerves but I nevertheless have pain that certainly feels like it is from the joint. Getting the muscles to relax, though, provides a clear improvement in pain levels.
I have also found long-lasting heat packs helpful as well as a TENS unit (up until I had partial joint replacement). A relatively new product (for me) that helps is Lidoderm pain patches.
Improvement in posture, sleeping in a partially reclining position (and anything else that improves sleep) and other general pain management techniques like meditation, distraction and relaxation are also helpful long-term.
I have other pain issues, including foot pain from structural birth defects (I am 54 yo). In my experience, you have to try and keep trying until you find the things that work for you. Doctors and therapists are certainly helpful but the fact is that there are so many variables in any given situation as complex as ours that they don't really know what your long-term prognosis will be. Even if you are told there is nothing more they can do for you, that doesn't mean that your pain will never get better. Pain is, after all, a perception as well as a signal down a nerve and that perception can be changed. Keep trying, learn about your own body and keep trying. Then keep trying some more.
I wish you the best of luck.
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