I hav just recently had a patient in with a very similar case, and I can tell you this: Physio alone will do squat! This needs and orthopaedic review.
My case: My teenage female patient presented with shoulder pain and a clunking collarbone two years ago. She is a competitive butterfly/freestyler. Attended a prolific sports physiotherapy practice and was diagnosed as having shoulder impingement syndrome and given a woefully inadequate RC strengthening programme.
I saw her eight months ago and diagnosed her as having multidirectional instability (as she has a hypermobility syndrome and an inferior GH sulcus sign) as well as having an unstable SC joint. We commenced a 'proper' RC programme focussing on scapular setting first and had some good gains. She got back in the pool, but was only in for two months before her clunking SC joint started playing up more. We tried taping, DTM, RC control, EMG biofeedback, mobilisations -- nothing helped.
I finally got her sent of to have a corticosteroid under radiographic imaging -- and immediate results. We confirmed our diagnosis and she got three months of complete pain relief. As the shot wore off the pain came back. I then organised a referral with a very prolific shoulder surgeon in Melbourne who specialises in instability and he agreed that she had a spontaneously subluxing SC joint and surgery is her only option for recovery. He has only performed this operation 16 times in his working life.
Because this condition is affecting her everyday life -- and because she wants to be a physio
-- she is going to have the surgery. But it is complicated:
- Surgeon will go in, take a graft of what I assume is palmaris tendon, to use as the ligament graft. Then go in and use it to stabilise the SC joint. He then uses a metal plate to lock her SC joint in place which will render her unable to elevate her arm for 3 months. The plate then gets removed and we commence rehab. Because of the precarious location of the subclavian vein he has to have a vascular surgeon on standby.
Sorry for the long blog, but this has been a diffcult issue therefore I want to try to save you time, using my experiences. My boss -- who has 13 years of sports physio experience behind him -- has also never seen this condition before. So I want to share for others sakes.
My advice: Get a cortico done under radiographic guidance to confirm diagnosis. If it works find
the best sporting shoulder surgeon you can find. And write a lengthy referral letter. My patient went against my advice and went to an orthopod closer to home who ran screaming from it. His oh-so-helpful advice was: "Stop swimming; take up gymnastics". And no, I'm not exaggerating here. I wish I was...
Feel free to ask any questions. As it is an intensely interesting case but a frustrating one.