A Nurse With Frozen Shoulder: How Orthopedics, Pain Medicine, and Rehab Worked Together
A Nurse Who Could Not Fix Her Own Shoulder
M worked in a hospital and knew the medical system well. But six months earlier, her left shoulder suddenly became difficult to lift.
At first, the symptoms were mild, and she did not take them too seriously. But the pain gradually worsened. She woke up at night from pain, struggled to dress, could not comb her hair normally, and even driving became difficult.
She visited Dr. Zhao from Orthopedics. After examination, Dr. Zhao diagnosed typical frozen shoulder, also known as adhesive capsulitis.
"Inflammation and adhesion create a cycle: the more it hurts, the less you move; the less you move, the worse the adhesion becomes."
Night pain · Difficulty dressing · Unable to comb hair · Driving affected · Conservative care failed
When Conservative Treatment Was Not Enough
M first tried oral pain medication and basic rehabilitation exercises. But the effect was poor. Movement caused pain, while avoiding movement made the shoulder even stiffer.
Dr. Zhao explained that this type of frozen shoulder, when conservative treatment is ineffective, may require a more active intervention.
He immediately contacted Dr. Xu from Pain Medicine, and the two specialists evaluated M together.
The Key Treatment — Four-Target Injection Under Ultrasound Guidance
Dr. Xu explained that injection treatment for frozen shoulder should not be a random single shot. The pain and stiffness often involve several anatomical targets, and each target needs to be addressed precisely.
- Shoulder inflammation
- Joint capsule adhesion
- Severe pain during movement
- Fear of moving the shoulder
- Progressive stiffness over time
- Glenohumeral joint cavity
- Subacromial bursa
- Axillary nerve block
- Suprascapular nerve block
- Ultrasound-guided precision placement
The glenohumeral joint injection helped reduce inflammation and adhesion at the root. The subacromial bursa injection addressed swelling and improved movement space. The axillary nerve block quickly reduced pain signals, while the suprascapular nerve block helped prepare the deeper tissues for rehabilitation.
Immediately after the injection, M's shoulder pain decreased noticeably, and she could lift her arm more easily.
Rehabilitation Opened the Real Recovery Window
Dr. Zhao emphasized that injection only creates a window of opportunity. True recovery depends on rehabilitation.
After the injection, the rehabilitation team immediately became involved. In the acute stage, they used gentle passive range-of-motion exercises within a pain-free range. During the recovery phase, they taught M home exercises, adjusted them one-on-one, and followed her progress regularly.
M had night pain, stiffness, and difficulty with daily activities such as dressing and combing her hair.
Four-target ultrasound-guided injection rapidly reduced pain and opened a rehabilitation window.
She could drive with one hand again, sleep normally, dress normally, and comb her hair without pain.
"I used to think this shoulder would stay like this forever. I never expected that three departments working together could truly unfreeze it."
— M
This case shows that frozen shoulder should not simply be endured. Injection can reduce pain, but rehabilitation prevents the shoulder from becoming stiff again. For persistent cases, multidisciplinary care may be far more effective than struggling alone.