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Frozen Shoulder
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<blockquote data-quote="HSSS" data-source="post: 2512583" data-attributes="member: 480869"><p>I had one a year or so before diagnosis of T2. It was my dominant arm and it literally wouldn’t move at all. Physio was all but impossible as it got worse and steroids did nothing. I ended up on serious painkillers and a zombie as a result. Thus I was sent for surgery (capsular release not manipulation). The surgeon afterwards reported it was a horrific case and was quite excited to show me the pictures of mine, typical frozen shoulders and normal ones. He also shaved the bone due to impingement. Whilst a very painful surgery for the first week or two it did very quickly improve after this, usable within a few more weeks, and continued to do so for about 6 months. I have full range of movement but still 5 yrs later get some nerve pain/aches that ongoing physio just isn’t sorting, though it has recovered the lost strength. I live in fear of another</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HSSS, post: 2512583, member: 480869"] I had one a year or so before diagnosis of T2. It was my dominant arm and it literally wouldn’t move at all. Physio was all but impossible as it got worse and steroids did nothing. I ended up on serious painkillers and a zombie as a result. Thus I was sent for surgery (capsular release not manipulation). The surgeon afterwards reported it was a horrific case and was quite excited to show me the pictures of mine, typical frozen shoulders and normal ones. He also shaved the bone due to impingement. Whilst a very painful surgery for the first week or two it did very quickly improve after this, usable within a few more weeks, and continued to do so for about 6 months. I have full range of movement but still 5 yrs later get some nerve pain/aches that ongoing physio just isn’t sorting, though it has recovered the lost strength. I live in fear of another [/QUOTE]
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