Anyone ever rehab torn labrum (SLAP Lesion)?

thegame

New Member
Got the bad news this month: torn labrum (known as a SLAP lesion)

loaded me up with cortisone, taking tons of ibuprofen, and I started basic rehabilitation...

Anyone ever deal with this or any similar shoulder injury?
What can I expect?
Do I dump flat barbell and military presses?

peace. thanks.
 
Got the bad news this month: torn labrum (known as a SLAP lesion)

loaded me up with cortisone, taking tons of ibuprofen, and I started basic rehabilitation...

Anyone ever deal with this or any similar shoulder injury?
What can I expect?
Do I dump flat barbell and military presses?

peace. thanks.

I've had that before bro....the bad news is, I'm steal dealing with pain 4 years later! I can't bench properly or do some shoulder exercises. But, my guess is I did not give it long enough to heal in the first place. If you want to make sure it heals, you have to drop all shoulder, back, and chest movements for a few months. That sounds crazy, but it's really the only way without resorting to GH.
 
I was recently diagnosed with a SLAP tear, along with some other stuff. I'm having surgery on a SLAP tear in a couple of weeks and have spent the last 8 weeks following PT, anti-inflamatories, seeing other orthopedic docs, and just generally trying to avoid surgery.

Everything I've heard/learned/discussed is you've got 3 options, stop doing anything that hurts that area (overhead work, benching of any type, dual arm movements, etc), have the surgery, or keep training until you are forced to have surgery. Sucks because I have a pretty active job, and doing something as simple as an upright row hurts like hell. Not being able to train with the same intensity is kicking my butt psychologically.

Not enough blood reaches the area to promote natural healing, so they'll go in, scrape around the area to stimulate blood, then immobilize it and allow it to heal. Takes about 6 months to truly be good again-- Pretty rediculous rehab time from simple (sounding) procedure. Depending on whether or not you tore your biceps tendon can determine length of recovery too. GH alone won't heal it, but will help surrounding areas. Surgery combined with GH will help shorten recovery time as well as help to heal up stronger. I'm not an expert, just consulted with 4 different ortho guys and 2 contrast MRI's.

So you've had an MRI/MRA to be diagnosed with the tear, you've pretty much gotta get cut on or just leave those exercises that hurt alone. Surgery is almost always sucessful if rehab is followed to schedule.

Hope this helps, it does suck brother.
 
Thanks Guys.

LEGAS: I think you are right on the money....although it is killing me to have to discover this on my own. My Ortho and my PT's seem to be living in a dream world. Yes, I had contrast MRI, and I have a SLAP tear to the Labrum...

Any pressing movement during rehab makes me feel like its just torn, and is not ever going to be stable or w/out pain....like rehab is a silly bandaide that can only be effective if I quit lifting in a serious way.

my Doctor says "no surgery in your 30's", which makes me think should I replace him? My PT says stupid shit like, "most pitchers in the major leagues have labrum tears, and never need surgery"....my judgment has kept me from shoving his "BAND WORK" up his ass.

You are sooo right, this is gonna be tougher psychologically than physically. I'm a pised off mess, as I watch my physique degrade by the day!

Good luck brother, thanks for the feedback guys.
 
Totally understand you on the PT guy-- you already feel like a jackass on the green bands to start with, then they want to tell you something different than what the doc says. What'seven worse is when the whole PT crew is a bunch of fatties-- I don't understand how that works at all. really pisses me off

I'll turn 33 within 2 weeks of my surgery next month, so it is truly up to you as far as surgery goes. I am kinda glad that at least I'll have some resolution to my situation instead of effin' around doing pointless work with a fatass ACT.

Hope it all turns out well!
 
Back
Top