Success stories: Reverse shoulder replacement surgery
Last week, I had a reverse shoulder replacement procedure on my left shoulder. It was very painful the first day. After that, it feels pretty darn good!
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Good afternoon, I read your story. I had my left shoulder done at the end of 2018. I had no pain at all. I was surprised, I was expecting a lot of pain and I kept waiting but no pain. Now it has been almost 3 yeas. I did my exercises and PT. Everything seemed fine. But now my range of motion is not good. I can not reach behind my back or over to the other arm. I have to use my other arm to push my arm up to put glasses in the cupboard. I do get a shot in my shoulder every now and then if the muscles really hurt. Some times my arm feels swollen and I have to rest it. I have been pushing my arms canning and not done yet. I would enjoy to hear as to your progress in the future. I wish you well and stay safe and healthly. KLH
"You must figure out a good sleep posture…..did you use a wedge?"
@artscaping -
I thought I would have trouble with position because I am a side sleeper with a very flat pillow preference, I don't even need one. I didn't think I wanted to spend a night in our recliner because it does not lay back flat enough for me. Luckily I had a bed wedge that my husband declined to use from a couple of years ago. With one pillow on that, I can sleep ok mostly on my left side. I am not normally a back sleeper, so have to find a fairly small arc of comfort from not quite on my stomach to not quite on my back. I wake up every one to three hours, but that is normal for me, and I usually fall asleep again within 10 minutes. I usually put the ice pack on my shoulder when I go to bed , it thaws and falls off in about the right amount of time, and I put it back in the freezer first time I get up to use the bathroom during the night.
@kilh thank you for the good wishes! I am sorry to hear that it sounds like you are losing your range of motion. I don't know much about what's medically possible joint-wise after a TSR, but could you be experiencing frozen shoulder/adhesive capsulitis now in your TSR shoulder?
Before I had any right shoulder pain, I went through frozen shoulder which took a couple of years to develop, never did have good behind the back twists with my right arm. Eventually when I could no longer get my hand up to my head to help wash hair, I finally asked to be referred to physical therapy to do something about it. I never felt shoulder pain at that time, just a limited range of movement. I was skeptical that PT would help, because I was an active person so felt that I should be moving my arm enough to keep this from happening. But PT did help by designing exercises that stretched the particular areas, and I got back to about 80% of my range of movement in about 6 weeks. So I'm wondering if there is something PT could do to help you regain some of your range of motion if indeed the problem is adhesive capsulitis.
Thanks for the information. Every time I go back to see the shoulder doc, they take x-rays and tell me all is fine and in the right place. Then he may give me a shot for pain. This helps for a while till I do too much. My muscles are shrinking down so less support. I do not have a lot of strength in my arm anymore. And I am left-handed so this does not help. My right arm is torn also and needs to be replaced but I am not so sure I want another new shoulder.
Glad you got your motion back. I never really got that far to start with. I am not so sure about the RSR. Time will time what I end up doing. Keep in touch as to your progress. Good job and stay healthy. KLH
Hello, I am a veteran of 11 orthopedic surgeries, some of which went flawlessly, others not so well. After dealing with more than one orthopedic surgeon who did x-rays and said "everything looks fine" I realized they are just looking to see if the repair or implant is OK - not at my function.
The next time I heard it, I said "well, obviously, it's not fine, something needs to happen." I got a referral to go back to the physical therapist with my issues. Voila! They did an eval, figured out where the problem was, and created a rehab program for me. After a while, things improved.
I have probably seen 10 orthopedic surgeons in my life, and only one ever showed an exercise, stretch or other strategy to heal or minimize pain. Their main focus is fixing bones and joints. Tha main focus of a PT, on the other hand, is restoring function and use.
Have you considered returning to your PT for help?
Sue
They mention PT but then nothing is done about it or put in orders. Also with covid, I am concerned about not much sanitizing equipment between patients. Also, PT is 35 miles away from home. I try to do my exercises. But I have been canning a lot and that tries my arms out. It helps if I use the heating pad or ice packs. In a couple of weeks, I am due to have the left side of my neck c4-c6 nerves burnt. Besides bone loss, I am losing all my cushions between my joints. So I do what I can and carry on. I think I saw the surgeon's PA was once this year. He is scheduling two months out. thanks for the reply and advice. Much appreciated.
@ddsack and @kilh. Thank you for your experiences and suggestions for the functionality of your shoulder after a reverse shoulder replacement. It is so helpful to have interchanges with patients who have different histories and who have explored different treatments. As @sueinmn has told us all, the shoulder's function after a "reverse" will be different for every patient and will also be different than the performance of the shoulder before an injury and/or surgery. I, too, was so happy to just be relieved of three years of pain after falling down a bit of a mountain. The slowpoke was not my surgeon but the insurance company which wanted me to try opioids first, then PT, and acupuncture before considering surgery.
Only after a long discussion with my surgeon as he sat on the floor giving it his best shot, did they approve the reverse surgery. I too was thrilled to experience three years of pain diminish rather quickly after the surgery. And then I was excited to find out how much I could actually use it since it was my dominant right arm. It has been several years now and I have determined that it is virtually impossible to achieve the range of motion I had before the fall. I can wash my hair when I hold my head down a bit. I can put glasses away in the cupboard on the first shelf. What I can't do well is what I call finer movements. They require support from my other arm. And so....life goes on.
I think what helped, surprisingly, was another fall down 16 steps with injuries to the other shoulder. With surgical repair, I find it more functional and yet also more painful. My most difficult task is tying my shoelaces. So, I buy the elastic ones that you just pull until they tighten. They're not as pretty on my new Hokas but they work.
Good luck to you both....keep up the good work and let me know if you find some more hints and tricks to improve that ROM.
May you be free of suffering and the causes of suffering.
Chris
Good evening @ddsack, thanks for the sleep details. Those kinds of posts are so very helpful to others. I am glad you are able to return to your normal sleep habits.
May you have happiness and the causes of happiness.
Chris
I have some problems, too, with range of motion,but overall. I am so pleased with the outcome that I can’t complain. I can still swing dance because the arm is supported through the various turns, and that really satisfies me.
I am glad to hear of such great progress. I probably could dance the polka but what gets my muscles all crammed up is lifting things. Just now I finished a canner load of applesauce and the lifting of the quarts in and out the canner with the tongs, my arms start to quiver, I am holding so tight for fear I will drop one on the floor. I am supposed to have surgery on my elbow to cut what is constricting my nerves. So there is another problem with the surgery. Just thought I would mention this. Thanks for your reply and stay in touch. Stay healthy. KLH