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Sportsman 5, what were your issues. My daughter plays college basketball and her shoulder socket is loose and gets inflamed and very painful when it gets hit or she shoots to much. We are looking at surgical options in offseason. Is this a labrum issue and or does it sound like what you had? Thanks
Symptoms will vary considerably. i never fully dislocated my shoulder, but it would sublux slightly (partially slide out of place) especially when the arm was over head. At the time, I was playing baseball and swimming competitively, which is the absolute worst thing I could have been doing. There was a clicking/ popping sound when I would hold it over head and rotate my arm as if throwing a baseball. Definitely had swelling and discomfort after exercise. I originally had an MRI done and the doctor found no tear, so I ended up doing a year of physical therapy. It didn't get better, so I had another MRI where they inject dye and they found a tear at that point. Had the surgery to repair the tear and had it surgically tightened, which is the exact same surgery Purvis is having. It took me the normal amount of time to recover back to about 90%, but another 6-12 months or so to where the shoulder felt the exact same as the other side due to the tightening of the capsule. I was consistent with going to physical therapy, but slacked some on home exercises. If I wasn't a somewhat undisciplined and lazy teenager at the time, than I'm sure the recovery back to 100% would have been faster. This was quite a few years ago. to this day I need to do stabilization exercises to keep it tight and strong and prevent inflammation. Part of the reason is that I lift fairly heavy weights, so I need strong stabilizers, but I would recommend continued "physical therapy type" exercises to anyone who has had stabilization issues in the past. I've worked in several jobs in the health and wellness fields. Based on my own experience and that of working with many people with chronic pain and injuries I would get the surgery if there is a tear. Obviously this is a general statement and every case is unique. However, a torn labrum is something you can live with, but there will likely be a lot of long term complications when it comes to degeneration of the joint and things of that nature. Like another poster said, it is a good idea to get multiple opinions from physicians about what to do. An reasonable start would be to get an MRI to see if there is an obvious tear to either labrum or any of the 4 rotator cuff muscles that rotate and stabilize the shoulder. If you have any further questions, than private message me.