Rotator Cuff vs. Impingement vs. Frozen Shoulder: How to Tell (and What to Do First)

SHOULDER PAIN · DECISION GUIDE · LOGANSPORT, IN

Rotator Cuff vs. Impingement vs. Frozen Shoulder: How to Tell (and What to Do First)

These three are commonly confused — but the best “first step” differs.

If you’ve been told “it’s probably your rotator cuff,” you’re not alone. Here are practical pattern checks to help you understand what’s most likely — and what to do first.

  • Simple pattern checks
  • First-step plan for each scenario
  • Clear red flags

Want a Clear Answer Fast?

We’ll test range of motion, strength, and shoulder blade mechanics to pinpoint the driver and guide your plan.

Quick Pattern Checks

Not a diagnosis—just a way to narrow the most likely bucket.

1

Frozen Shoulder (stiff + blocked)

Key sign: your shoulder feels “stuck,” especially rotating outward. Pain may be present, but stiffness is dominant.

First step: staged mobility (not aggressive stretching) + a plan that respects tissue irritability.

2

Impingement-Type Pain (painful arc)

Key sign: pain during part of the lift (often 60–120°), worse with repeated overhead work.

First step: improve scapular mechanics + mobility + gradual strengthening.

3

Rotator Cuff Irritation (tendon overload)

Key sign: pain/weakness with lifting away from the body and lowering the arm; night pain is common.

First step: load management + specific tendon strengthening and technique cleanup.

When to Worry

Seek urgent evaluation for deformity after injury, inability to lift the arm, sudden severe swelling, fever, chest pain/shortness of breath, or new numbness/weakness down the arm.

Get Clarity and a Plan That Fits

We’ll confirm what’s driving your symptoms and build a step-by-step path forward.

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