Shoulder pain while lifting the arm overhead is one of the most common musculoskeletal complaints among adults. Many people initially ignore the pain thinking it is only temporary muscle strain, but untreated shoulder impingement syndrome can gradually affect daily activities, sleep, work performance, and shoulder mobility.
At Asia Digital Physiotherapy Orthopedic & Rehabilitation Center (ADPORC), patients with shoulder impingement syndrome regularly receive evidence-based physiotherapy management under the supervision of Dr. Saddam Hossain, PT.
Shoulder Impingement Syndrome (SIS) occurs when the tendons or soft tissues inside the shoulder become compressed between the acromion and humeral head during arm movement. Repetitive overhead activity, poor posture, muscle imbalance, sports injury, and degenerative changes commonly contribute to this condition.
Many patients experience pain while reaching overhead, dressing, combing hair, lifting objects, or sleeping on the affected side.
What Is Shoulder Impingement Syndrome?
Shoulder Impingement Syndrome (SIS) is a painful condition where the soft tissues inside the shoulder joint become compressed during shoulder movement, especially during overhead activities.
The condition commonly involves rotator cuff tendons, subacromial bursa, and surrounding soft tissues.
This repeated compression causes pain, inflammation, reduced shoulder movement, weakness, and difficulty performing daily activities. Over time, untreated impingement may lead to rotator cuff tendinitis, rotator cuff tear, chronic shoulder dysfunction, or frozen shoulder.
Anatomy
The shoulder is formed mainly by the humerus, scapula, and clavicle. Clinically important structures in SIS include the acromion, subacromial space, rotator cuff tendons, and subacromial bursa.
The rotator cuff muscles help stabilize and move the shoulder: supraspinatus, infraspinatus, teres minor, and subscapularis. During overhead movement, these tissues pass beneath the acromion. If the subacromial space narrows, the tissues become compressed, resulting in impingement.
Pathophysiology
Shoulder impingement develops when repeated mechanical compression irritates the rotator cuff tendons and subacromial bursa.
Common contributing mechanisms include poor posture, rounded shoulders, muscle imbalance, scapular dyskinesia, weak rotator cuff muscles, repetitive overhead activity, and degenerative acromial changes. Repeated friction causes inflammation, tendon irritation, swelling, pain during movement, reduced shoulder mechanics, and progressive weakness.
If untreated, chronic inflammation may eventually cause tendon degeneration or rotator cuff tear.
Common Signs and Symptoms
- Pain while lifting the arm overhead
- Shoulder pain during reaching activities
- Pain while combing hair or dressing
- Difficulty lifting objects
- Night pain, especially when lying on the affected side
- Painful arc during shoulder abduction
- Shoulder weakness
- Clicking or catching sensation
- Reduced shoulder mobility
- Gradual loss of functional activities
Patients should not ignore persistent shoulder pain because prolonged impingement may increase the risk of rotator cuff damage and chronic shoulder stiffness.
Common Causes
- Repetitive overhead work
- Sports involving overhead movement
- Poor posture and rounded shoulders
- Prolonged computer or desk work
- Rotator cuff weakness
- Scapular muscle imbalance
- Aging-related degenerative changes
- Shoulder instability
- Previous shoulder injury
- Improper lifting mechanics
How Shoulder Impingement Syndrome Is Diagnosed
Physical Examinations
Assessment begins with postural evaluation, shoulder range of motion testing, muscle strength testing, scapular movement analysis, and functional movement assessment.
Special Tests
- Neer Impingement Test
- Hawkins-Kennedy Test
- Painful Arc Test
- Empty Can Test
Investigations
- X-ray
- Ultrasound
- MRI (if rotator cuff tear is suspected)
How Physiotherapy Helps
Physiotherapy is one of the primary conservative treatment options for Shoulder Impingement Syndrome.
Treatment may include assessment, pain control modalities, manual therapy, exercise therapy, movement correction, and a prevention strategy.
- Assessment: Detailed evaluation of posture, shoulder biomechanics, muscle imbalance, and functional limitations.
- Pain Control Modalities: TENS, ultrasound therapy, IFT, advanced electrotherapy, or cryotherapy as clinically indicated.
- Manual Therapy: Joint mobilization, soft tissue release, and scapular mobilization.
- Exercise Therapy: Rotator cuff strengthening, scapular stabilization, mobility exercises, stretching, and postural correction exercises.
- Movement Correction: Training to improve shoulder mechanics, avoid painful movement patterns, and correct ergonomic errors.
- Prevention Strategy: Postural education, activity modification, workplace advice, and a home exercise program.
Surgery
Most patients improve with conservative physiotherapy management.
However, surgery may be considered if severe structural damage exists, a significant rotator cuff tear is present, or conservative treatment fails after several months. Common surgical procedures may include subacromial decompression and rotator cuff repair.
Comparisons
| Feature | Shoulder Impingement Syndrome | Frozen Shoulder | Rotator Cuff Tear |
|---|---|---|---|
| Main Problem | Tendon compression | Joint capsule stiffness | Tendon damage |
| Pain Pattern | Overhead movement pain | Severe stiffness + pain | Weakness + pain |
| Shoulder Movement | Painful but possible | Severely restricted | Weakness prominent |
| Night Pain | Common | Very common | Common |
| Weakness | Mild to moderate | Usually secondary | Significant |
Home Advice and Prevention
- Avoid repetitive overhead activities initially.
- Maintain proper posture.
- Do not sleep directly on the painful shoulder.
- Use ergonomic workstation setup.
- Perform regular shoulder mobility exercises.
- Avoid sudden heavy lifting.
- Strengthen shoulder stabilizing muscles.
Home Exercises
These exercises are safe at a beginner level if pain is mild.
-
Pendulum Exercise: Lean forward slightly and gently swing the arm in small circles.
Benefit: Helps reduce stiffness and improve joint mobility. -
Wall Climbing Exercise: Use fingers to slowly walk the hand upward along a wall.
Benefit: Improves shoulder elevation and mobility. -
Scapular Retraction Exercise: Pull both shoulder blades backward gently while maintaining upright posture.
Benefit: Improves posture and scapular stability. -
Isometric Shoulder External Rotation: Press the arm outward against a wall without actual movement.
Benefit: Activates and strengthens rotator cuff muscles. -
Cross-Body Shoulder Stretch: Gently pull the affected arm across the chest.
Benefit: Helps improve posterior shoulder flexibility.
Perform 10-15 repetitions, twice daily, strictly under the guidance of a physiotherapist to avoid overuse or incorrect movement patterns.
When to See a Physiotherapist (Visit ADPORC)?
You should consult a physiotherapist if:
- Shoulder pain persists for more than 1-2 weeks.
- Pain increases during overhead movement.
- Night pain disturbs sleep.
- Shoulder weakness or stiffness develops.
Ignoring persistent shoulder pain may increase the risk of chronic dysfunction and rotator cuff injury.
Why ADPORC Is a Trusted Physiotherapy Center in Dhaka
ADPORC focuses on evidence-based physiotherapy for musculoskeletal, neurological, and sports-related conditions.
- Expert Care by Dr. Saddam Hossain, PT:
Years of experience treating musculoskeletal and neurological conditions through structured rehabilitation. - Condition-Specific Physiotherapy Programs:
Each treatment plan is designed based on clinical assessment, pain stage, movement dysfunction, and functional goals. - Advanced Electrotherapy and Rehabilitation Equipment:
Modern modalities are used only when clinically indicated, combined with manual therapy and corrective exercises. - One-on-One Supervised Sessions:
Individual attention ensures correct technique, safe progression, and faster recovery. - Accessible Location in Jatrabari, Dhaka:
Patients regularly visit ADPORC from Jatrabari, Dholaipar, Shonir Akhra, Doyagonj, Puran Dhaka, Keraniganj, Narayanganj, and surrounding areas.
If you are looking for shoulder impingement syndrome physiotherapy treatment in Dhaka, ADPORC provides structured rehabilitation programs focused on pain relief, movement restoration, and long-term shoulder function improvement.
Book Your Appointment Today
Do not let shoulder pain limit your daily life. Take the first step toward effective recovery with professional physiotherapy care.
Visit ADPORC and see why patients from Jatrabari and surrounding areas including Dholaipar, Doyagonj, Shonir Akhra, Saydabad, Jurain, Hasnabad, Puran Dhaka, Keraniganj, and Narayanganj trust us.
- Location: 270/1 Dholaipar, South Jatrabari, Dhaka-1204
- Call: 01950-935236
- Website: adporc.com
Asia Digital Physiotherapy & Orthopedic Rehabilitation Center