I know there have been a few threads on shoulder issues over the last year. Just thought I would share my story in hope it might give someone else aomee info to help them.
In Nov 2018 I tore the labrum on my shoulder in to two pieces. Had surgery in January and had it fixed. After recovery and a good amount of PT, i was doing fabulous. Then I fell and reinjured it in June. Started to make noise when I would move it, hurt to do a lot of movements at the extremes and then general weakness. I delayed any treatment until after hunting knowing if surgery was needed I would be out for a bit.
Had an MRI in December and they didnt see anything wrong with the joint requiring surgery. But there was a 5mm x16mm "unknown object" just floating around in there. Dr. says at minimum it needs to be removed and then while he's in there, he'll use a camera to look at the rest of the joint. Then fix what he see's.
Well it turns out the foreign piece was a broken/dislodged anchor from when the original surgery was done. Old anchor removed, new one put in. So no real repair to anything thank god. Seems the anchor was just moving around in the joint causing pain. The tear healed perfectly and a full recovery with little to no pain is expected.
My expereince has been very positive. For those considering getting their shoulder fixed, choose the right doctor, and facility. Go to the recommended PT and follow instructions.
Good luck guys!!
In Nov 2018 I tore the labrum on my shoulder in to two pieces. Had surgery in January and had it fixed. After recovery and a good amount of PT, i was doing fabulous. Then I fell and reinjured it in June. Started to make noise when I would move it, hurt to do a lot of movements at the extremes and then general weakness. I delayed any treatment until after hunting knowing if surgery was needed I would be out for a bit.
Had an MRI in December and they didnt see anything wrong with the joint requiring surgery. But there was a 5mm x16mm "unknown object" just floating around in there. Dr. says at minimum it needs to be removed and then while he's in there, he'll use a camera to look at the rest of the joint. Then fix what he see's.
Well it turns out the foreign piece was a broken/dislodged anchor from when the original surgery was done. Old anchor removed, new one put in. So no real repair to anything thank god. Seems the anchor was just moving around in the joint causing pain. The tear healed perfectly and a full recovery with little to no pain is expected.
My expereince has been very positive. For those considering getting their shoulder fixed, choose the right doctor, and facility. Go to the recommended PT and follow instructions.
Good luck guys!!