Rotator Cuff Disorders: What Increases Your Risk
What Increases Your Risk
Things that may increase the risk of rotator cuff disorders include:
- Aging.
- Having long-standing rotator cuff tendinitis.
- Holding or moving your arm overhead frequently, such as when you regularly paint, wait tables, or play tennis, baseball, and other throwing sports.
- Previous shoulder injuries, such as dislocations and broken bones.
- Having a rotator cuff tear in the other shoulder.
- Irregularities of the muscles, tendons, and bones in the shoulder that increase wear on the rotator cuff tendons.
- Having received multiple corticosteroid injections in the shoulder, which may weaken tendons and increase your risk.
- Smoking, which decreases the blood supply and slows the healing process.
- Shoulder instability.
As the rotator cuff and the shoulder weaken, the risk of developing a partial or complete tear
increases. Complete tears are present in 25% of people older than 60.1
| Last updated: | February 08, 2008 |
|---|---|
| Author: | Shannon Erstad, MBA/MPH |
| Reviewed By: | William M. Green, MD - Emergency Medicine, Patrick J. McMahon, MD - Orthopedics |
| Editors: | Kathleen M. Ariss, MS, Pat Truman, MATC |
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