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.. Read More
Conditions
- Arthritis of the Shoulder
- Shoulder Fracture
- Fracture of the Shoulder Blade (Scapula)
- Clavicle Fracture
- Glenoid Fractures
- Shoulder Dislocation
- Shoulder Labral Tear
- Subacromial Impingement Syndrome
- Anterior Shoulder Instability
- Multidirectional Instability of the Shoulder
- Snapping Scapula
- Post-traumatic Stiffness of the Shoulder
- Frozen Shoulder
- Rotator Cuff Arthropathy
- Proximal Biceps Tendinitis
- Shoulder Bursitis
- Rotator Cuff Re-tear
- Throwing Injuries of the Shoulder
- Partial Rotator Cuff Tear
- Biceps Tendon Rupture
- Rotator Cuff Bursitis
- Massive Retracted Rotator Cuff Tear
- Calcification Tendinitis
Procedures
- Shoulder Arthroscopy
- Arthroscopic Acromioplasty
- Arthroscopic Bankart Repair
- Arthroscopic Scapulothoracic Bursectomy
- Minimally Invasive Shoulder Joint Replacement
- Shoulder Joint Replacement
- Revision Shoulder Replacement
- Reverse Shoulder Replacement
- Partial Shoulder Replacement
- Proximal Biceps Tenodesis
- Malunion Surgery of the Shoulder
- Biologic Shoulder Resurfacing
- Humeral Shaft Fracture Repair
- ORIF of the Scapula Fractures
- SLAP Repair
- Arthroscopic Frozen Shoulder Release
- Distal Clavicle Excision
- Capsular Release
- Pectoralis Major Tears/Repairs
- AC Joint Repair
- ORIF of the Clavicle Fractures
- Arthroscopic Superior Capsular Reconstruction (SCR)
- Complex Fracture Repair of the Shoulder
- Triceps Repair