What Causes Frozen Shoulder?

frozen shoulder - lady

Frozen Shoulder accounts for only a small percentage of shoulder pain issues, and that’s a good thing considering Frozen Shoulder is not only difficult to treat, but it’s also a highly debilitating condition. Being a non-disabled person and then suddenly finding that you have a Frozen Shoulder is like waking up one day and suddenly having a full-blown disability. There is nothing quite like things going wrong with the body to help us appreciate how great life is when our bodies are working.

The primary difference between Frozen Shoulder and most other shoulder complaints is that a Frozen Shoulder tends to be much stiffer and more restricted, meaning that a Frozen Shoulder is painful and disabling. Frozen Shoulder predominantly occurs in females. The majority of Frozen Shoulders also tend to occur in people who have had elevated stress levels for some time. However, it would be a mistake to assume that stress is the only factor in generating Frozen Shoulder and of course, being a female isn’t the only factor in Frozen Shoulder either. So what causes Frozen Shoulder?

Stress-related conditions are always complex and never simple. If you have Irritable-Bowel Syndrome (IBS) triggered by stress, it is likely that you also have a genetic predisposition to IBS. It’s also likely that you have an imbalance in your gut bacteria; potentially, you may have also had a bad diet over an extended period. Just because stress triggers the IBS, it doesn’t mean that it’s the whole story. In the same way that stress combined with genetics and poor diet can cause IBS, stress combined with other factors tends to cause Frozen Shoulder. 

On a physical level, a Frozen Shoulder results from chronic loss of strength and postural integrity within the shoulder girdle. Sitting for thousands and thousands of hours, as much office work causes muscle wasting behind the Shoulder, leading to the gradual collapse of posture. Even office workers who have no stress inflict a significant amount of strain on the tissues of the Shoulder joint, including the joint capsule; juts by sitting. These weaknesses tend to go relatively unnoticed for long periods, but when combined with increased stress and a lack of or access to exercise, episodes of Frozen Shoulder are invited in.

frozen shoulder

So if we were going to summarise and simplify the underlying causes of Frozen Shoulder, it would be enough to say that Frozen Shoulder is what happens when poor posture combines with poor movement patterns and lack of exercise; all triggered into a full blown capsulitis by periods of high stress. We don’t know for sure exactly why the joint capsule thickens. But in most cases, when the body chooses to thicken a tissue, it tries to reinforce and support itself because it’s under stress. In any case it is the psychological stress that comes along and causes the pot to boil over.

In other words, with extreme weakness behind your Shoulder, loss of movement within the shoulder girdle combined with ‘having the weight of the world on your shoulders’, you are at a substantially higher risk of a Frozen Shoulder. If you have had a Frozen Shoulder, you will know that you are also at risk of suffering for a very long time.

The good news is that there are solutions for the Frozen Shoulder problem, just as there are solutions for the back pain problem and the tooth decay problem. Conditions that we struggled with in the past are becoming increasingly treatable in the modern world, so the news is overwhelmingly good.

So if we were going to summarise and simplify the underlying causes of Frozen Shoulder, it would be enough to say that Frozen Shoulder is what happens when poor posture combines with poor movement patterns and lack of exercise; all triggered into a full blown capsulitis by periods of high stress. We don’t know for sure exactly why the joint capsule thickens. But in most cases, when the body chooses to thicken a tissue, it tries to reinforce and support itself because it’s under stress. In any case it is the psychological stress that comes along and causes the pot to boil over.

In other words, with extreme weakness behind your Shoulder, loss of movement within the shoulder girdle combined with ‘having the weight of the world on your shoulders’, you are at a substantially higher risk of a Frozen Shoulder. If you have had a Frozen Shoulder, you will know that you are also at risk of suffering for a very long time.

The good news is that there are solutions for the Frozen Shoulder problem, just as there are solutions for the back pain problem and the tooth decay problem. Conditions that we struggled with in the past are becoming increasingly treatable in the modern world, so the news is overwhelmingly good.

Successful treatment for Frozen Shoulder starts with pain relief and mobilisation using various clinical tools. Once the pain and movements have improved, it is usually necessary to work gently on stress reduction tools and postural strengthening exercises in the longer term to prevent a recurrence. This process is not rocket science, but the inevitable bad news is that it does take time. If you’re struggling with Frozen Shoulder, you might be happy to hear that there are solutions that work.

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