Shoulder Conditions
SHOULDER PAIN & MOBILITY
Shoulder conditions can affect comfort, strength, motion, sleep, and daily function. Some problems develop gradually from overuse or arthritis, while others begin after injury and make it harder to lift, reach, or use the arm normally.
- Pain with lifting or reaching
- Stiffness or limited motion
- Weakness after injury or overuse
- Care depends on cause and severity
Evaluation & Next Steps
- Clear severity assessment and next steps
- Supportive care and recovery guidance
- Care across 4 Las Vegas locations
Call: (702) 703-4340
Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm
On this page
Quick Summary
Key takeaway: Shoulder conditions can come from injury, overuse, inflammation, tendon problems, joint stiffness, or arthritis. Evaluation helps identify the source of pain and whether supportive care, rehabilitation, imaging, or additional treatment planning is needed.
Shoulder care usually focuses on symptom pattern, strength, range of motion, injury history, and how symptoms affect daily activities. Persistent pain, weakness, night pain, or loss of motion should be evaluated so care can be matched to the underlying problem.
Overview
What are Shoulder Conditions?
Shoulder conditions include a wide range of problems that affect the muscles, tendons, ligaments, joint surfaces, and surrounding soft tissues. Symptoms may appear after a fall or sports injury, or they may build gradually from repetitive motion, inflammation, arthritis, or tendon irritation.
Why Evaluation Matters
Evaluation matters because shoulder pain can have different causes that need different treatment plans. Identifying whether symptoms are related to stiffness, inflammation, tendon injury, instability, arthritis, or another issue helps guide safe activity, rehabilitation, imaging, and follow-up.
Symptoms
Shoulder symptoms can vary depending on whether the problem involves the joint, tendons, muscles, nerves, or surrounding soft tissues. Common symptoms include pain, stiffness, weakness, and limited function.
Pain With Lifting or Reaching
Pain may worsen when reaching overhead, lifting objects, dressing, or using the arm away from the body.
Weakness or Loss of Strength
The shoulder or arm may feel weak, unstable, or difficult to control after injury, overuse, or tendon irritation.
Stiffness or Limited Motion
Stiffness may make it harder to raise the arm, rotate the shoulder, reach behind the back, or sleep comfortably.
Night Pain or Daily Limitation
Some shoulder conditions cause pain at night, trouble sleeping on one side, or difficulty with normal daily tasks.
Seek care now if…
Seek care promptly if shoulder pain follows a major injury, the arm looks deformed, weakness is sudden or severe, numbness develops, motion is rapidly worsening, or pain is accompanied by chest pain or shortness of breath.
Causes & Risk Factors
Shoulder conditions may develop after injury, repetitive strain, inflammation, arthritis, tendon irritation, or changes in joint mobility. Risk factors depend on activity level, age, prior injuries, and overall joint health.
Common Causes
- Sports or lifting injuries
- Repetitive overhead activity
- Tendon irritation or tears
- Arthritis or joint wear
- Stiffness after limited use
Many shoulder problems begin when soft tissues, tendons, or joint surfaces become irritated, overloaded, injured, or less mobile over time.
Risk Factors
- Prior shoulder injury
- Repetitive work or sports activity
- Age-related tendon changes
- Arthritis or joint stiffness
- Poor shoulder mechanics
- Weakness or imbalance
- Diabetes or inflammatory conditions
- Delayed care after injury
Diagnosis
Diagnosis starts with a review of symptoms, injury history, activity demands, range of motion, and strength. Imaging may be recommended when symptoms persist, weakness is significant, or a structural injury is suspected.
Typical Evaluation
- Symptom and injury review
- Range-of-motion assessment
- Strength and stability testing
- Review of daily activity limits
- Imaging when needed
What to Bring
- Timeline of symptoms
- Injury or overuse details
- Prior imaging or reports
- Current medications
- Activity and work demands
Treatment Options
Treatment depends on the cause of shoulder pain, severity of symptoms, strength and motion findings, imaging results, and how much the condition limits work, sleep, sports, or daily function.
Related care: Treatment planning may include activity modification, supportive care, rehabilitation, imaging review, injections, or surgical discussion when shoulder symptoms are severe or persistent.
Early Care
- Activity modification
- Pain and swelling control
- Avoid painful lifting
- Early evaluation after injury
Support / Activity Modification
- Temporary rest from triggers
- Posture and movement guidance
- Work or sport adjustments
- Supportive home measures
Rehabilitation / Physical Therapy
- Range-of-motion work
- Strengthening progression
- Shoulder mechanics training
- Return-to-activity planning
Additional Evaluation
- Persistent night pain
- Significant weakness
- Loss of motion
- Suspected tendon injury
Recovery
Recovery depends on the diagnosis, severity of symptoms, activity demands, and whether the shoulder problem is related to injury, inflammation, stiffness, tendon damage, or arthritis. Some conditions improve with supportive care and rehabilitation, while others need further evaluation.
What Helps Most
- Consistent rehab: Gradual mobility and strengthening often support recovery.
- Activity changes: Avoiding painful triggers can help calm irritation.
- Good mechanics: Better shoulder and posture control may reduce strain.
- Follow-up: Persistent weakness or stiffness should be reassessed.
- Imaging review: Imaging may help when symptoms do not improve.
When to Follow Up
- Pain is worsening: Symptoms are increasing instead of improving.
- Weakness persists: Lifting or reaching remains difficult.
- Motion is limited: Stiffness is interfering with daily activity.
- Night pain continues: Sleep is affected by shoulder pain.
- Injury symptoms remain: Pain follows a fall, pop, or sudden event.
- Conservative care is not helping: Symptoms continue despite initial care.
Frequently Asked Questions
Shoulder pain can come from tendon irritation, injury, arthritis, stiffness, instability, inflammation, or overuse. Evaluation helps identify the likely source.
Shoulder pain should be evaluated when it is worsening, limits motion, causes weakness, affects sleep, follows an injury, or does not improve with basic care.
Yes. Weakness can happen with tendon injury, pain inhibition, instability, nerve irritation, or reduced use after injury.
Night pain can occur when irritated tendons, inflamed tissues, stiffness, or joint problems are compressed in certain sleeping positions.
Diagnosis may include symptom review, physical exam, strength and motion testing, and imaging when a structural problem is suspected.
No. Many shoulder conditions improve with activity changes, supportive care, rehabilitation, or injections, but persistent weakness, stiffness, or structural injury may need further discussion.
Locations
LVVIS offers vein evaluation and treatment planning at multiple Las Vegas locations. Choose the office that is most convenient when scheduling your visit.
LVVIS West Side Consultation Office
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Consultations and vascular evaluations
LV2 Limb & Vascular Division
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Limb preservation and podiatry partnership care
LVVIS East Procedure Office
2250 E Flamingo Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89119
Procedures, diagnostics, and circulatory care
LVVIS West Side Surgical Center
6120 S Fort Apache Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Advanced vascular and interventional procedures