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Shoulders
The shoulder or gleno humeral joint
is an intricate arrangement - loads of movement is available in just about
every direction, but stability is limited, so this has to be provided
by the muscles and ligaments surrounding it. The head of the humerus (the
long bone of the upper arm ) moves on the glenoid, a slightly convex surface
on the outer aspect of the shoulder blade. The collar bone also connects
up with a part of the shoulder blade called the acromion. The muscles
surrounding the joint, running between the humerus and shoulder blade
are known as the rotator cuff.
Shoulders dislocate relatively easily,
once the dislocation is treated it is important to get all the muscles
back in good working order. Shoulders can become painful and restricted
seemingly out of the blue, and the term frozen shoulder is quite often
used.
Shoulder problems need really careful
examination, they can be very difficult to diagnose because the whole
mechanism is so intricate. Not only that, a significant number of pain
patterns will appear to be arising from the shoulder when in fact the
problem lies in the neck and the pain is actually referred to the shoulder,
shoulder blade or down the arm.
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