Note: This information is provided for general educational purposes only. Because every individual is different, these instructions will not apply to every patient. Only your doctor can tell you what is appropriate for you.

For most shoulder surgeries, you will be doing your own physical therapy for the first 8-12 weeks after your operation. The goal is to achieve full shoulder motion by doing passive range-of-motion exercises (not strengthening exercises) at home during this time. A physical therapist will instruct you the day after your surgery while you’re in the hospital. At that time you will most likely be given a copy of one of our home therapy protocols:

You will not start strengthening exercises until three months after your surgery unless instructed to do so by your doctor. A prescription will be given to you to visit a physical therapist for supervised strengthening exercises when your doctor feels that it is appropriate.

It cannot be overemphasized that aggressive, early strengthening exercises are to be discouraged if your rotator cuff was repaired during your surgery. The cuff is repaired during a typical shoulder replacement. Remember, three months after your surgery the muscle tendons that were repaired will only have regained 50% of their previous strength! Overdoing it too soon can cause the tendon to tear from the bone, which may require an additional surgery!

Some images on this site are used courtesy of:

Pacific Medical

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