Anatomy
The shoulder is the most flexible joint in the body that enables a wide range of movements including forward flexion, abduction, adduction, external rotation, internal rotation, and 360-degree circumduction. Thus, the shoulder joint is considered the most insecure joint of the body, but the support of ligaments, muscles, and tendons function to provide the required stability. View more
Conditions
- Subacromial Impingement Syndrome
- Rotator Cuff Tear
- Shoulder Pain
- Anterior Shoulder Instability
- Subluxation
- Posterior Shoulder Instability
- Overhead Athlete's Shoulder
- Shoulder Impingement
- Shoulder Instability
- Shoulder Labral Tear
- Shoulder Dislocation
- Frozen Shoulder
- Shoulder Trauma
- Proximal Biceps Tendinitis
- Rotator Cuff Re-tear
- AC Joint Separation
- Shoulder Tendonitis
- Throwing Injuries of the Shoulder
- Acromioclavicular (AC) Arthritis
- Shoulder Disorders
- Partial Rotator Cuff Tear
- Shoulder Labral Tear with Instability
- Rotator Cuff Bursitis
- Multidirectional Instability of the Shoulder
- Calcific Tendinitis
- Rotator Cuff Pain
Procedures
- Proximal Biceps Tenodesis
- Intraarticular Shoulder Injection
- Non-surgical Shoulder Treatments
- Anterior Shoulder Stabilization
- Posterior Shoulder Stabilization
- Rotator Cuff Repair
- SLAP Repair
- Shoulder Stabilization
- Shoulder Arthroscopy
- Distal Clavicle Excision
- Shoulder Surgery
- Subacromial Decompression
- Acromioclavicular (AC) Joint Reconstruction