Shoulder
Shoulder Anatomy
The shoulder is the most flexible joint in the body that enables a wide range of movements including forward flexion, abduction, adduction, external rotation, internal rotation, and 360-degree circumduction. Thus, the shoulder joint is considered the most insecure joint of the body, but the support of ligaments, muscles, and tendons function to provide the required stability.
Conditions
- Anterior Shoulder Instability
- Arthritis of the Shoulder
- Biceps Tendon Rupture
- Clavicle Fracture
- Frozen Shoulder
- Proximal Biceps Tendonitis
- Proximal Humerus Fractures
- Rotator Cuff Arthropathy
- Rotator Cuff Bursitis
- Rotator Cuff Calcification
- Rotator Cuff Pain
- Rotator Cuff Tear
- Shoulder Bursitis
- Shoulder Dislocation
- Shoulder Disorders
- Shoulder Fracture
- Shoulder Instability
- Shoulder Labral Tear with Instability
- Shoulder Ligament Injuries
- Shoulder Pain
- Shoulder Tendonitis
- Shoulder Trauma
- SLAP Tears
- Subacromial Impingement Syndrome
Procedures
- Anterior Shoulder Stabilization
- Arthroscopic Frozen Shoulder Release
- Capsular Release
- Complex Fracture Repair of the Shoulder
- Open Shoulder Stabilization
- ORIF of Clavicle Fractures
- ORIF Proximal Humerus Fracture
- Outpatient Shoulder Replacement
- Partial Shoulder Replacement (Shoulder Hemiarthroplasty)
- Periprosthetic Shoulder Fracture Fixation
- Proximal Biceps Tenodesis
- Reverse Shoulder Replacement
- Revision Rotator Cuff Surgery
- Rotator Cuff Repair
- Shoulder Joint Replacement
- Shoulder Stabilization
- SLAP Repair