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Hey guys, I am a doc and I specialize in prolotherapy in San Francisco. Shoot me a pm where your friend lives and I can give you a good referral. I had shoulder pain also for 15 years and nothing worked better, including surgery and PT. I have seen a 90+ % success rate with prolotherapy and rotator cuff tears. Prolotherapy is a simple treatment actually, and unlike cortisone shots, you do not get any associated long term weakening of the joint. The opposite happens. New tissue is created and the old scar tissue is replaced with a healthy tendon or ligament. It is considered alternative only because it is not covered by insurance. However, I learned from professors at the UW Madison medical school, and heads of sports medicine training sites. There are toms of resources online, but they key is to find someone trained by this group:http://www.hacketthemwall.org/HHF/List_of_Prolotherapists.html And your friend is right, he has nothing to lose as long as he goes to a competent well trained prolotherapist. I hope this helps. Cheers,Morgan
Looking at this now...http://www.regenexx.com/
I have no idea how these things go misdiagnosed. Please don't take that like I think I'm better than the physicians who treated you, but I just don't get it. There's very specific special tests that are routine in a clinical exam. by special tests, I mean physical exam tests, not imaging.The empty can test (aka supraspinatus test) and O'Brien's test should be done on everyone with any shoulder pain. It's impossible to not have significant weakness in an empty can test when the rotator cuff has any deficiencies.
Surprisingly, strength can be well-maintained with a torn supraspinatus if the front and back cables, the subscapularis and infraspinatus are intact. It forms a kind of suspension bridge over the top of the shoulder so the drop-arm test and empty can tests show paradoxical strength. Check out Stephen Burkhart, MD's articles on "margin convergence" or "massive cuff repair" dating back to 1997. It's a technique of massive cuff repair where the supraspinatus is so atrophied that it cannot be brought back to the humerus and the repair consists of sewing the subscap to the infraspinatus.Among orthopods, the O'Brien's maneuver/test, while helpful, is often equivocal and is not always specific/sensitive for a torn labrum.Having fixed hundreds of rotator cuff tears arthroscopically (and open, prior to 7 years ago when techniques allowed me to switch), I can tell you from personal experience that you'd be surprised. And while I don't always get things right, I don't consider myself a chronic misdiagnoser!Good thread!Paul