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Shoulder Pain Treatment in Brick, NJ

Shoulder anatomy diagram showing muscles, rotator cuff, and joint structure

The Shoulder: Remarkable Range, Real Vulnerability

No joint in the human body moves as freely as the shoulder. That freedom — the ability to reach overhead, behind the back, across the body, and in full rotation — is achieved through a structure that deliberately sacrifices stability for mobility. The humeral head sits in the glenoid fossa of the scapula in a socket so shallow that only a fraction of the ball is covered at any position.

Stability is provided dynamically by the rotator cuff (supraspinatus, infraspinatus, teres minor, subscapularis), and statically by the labrum, joint capsule, and ligaments. When any of these are overwhelmed or degenerate, the result is pain and dysfunction that can affect every aspect of daily life.

At Trinity Rehab in Brick, we regularly diagnose and treat:

  • Rotator cuff tendinopathy and tears — the spectrum from tendon irritation through partial and full thickness tearing; extremely common in Brick’s active sports and working communities
  • Subacromial impingement syndrome — tendons compressed during arm elevation; the most prevalent shoulder complaint across all ages and activity levels
  • Shoulder bursitis — acute or chronic inflammation of the subacromial bursa
  • Adhesive capsulitis (frozen shoulder) — a self-limiting but potentially prolonged condition of progressive stiffness and pain; PT dramatically accelerates resolution
  • SLAP labral tears — superior labral injuries common in overhead athletes and workers who’ve sustained a traction-type shoulder injury
  • AC joint sprains — from falls, contact sports, and heavy overhead loading in manufacturing and warehousing
  • Biceps tendinitis — anterior shoulder pain with lifting and overhead reach; common in workers who frequently lift or transfer heavy loads
Physical therapist performing manual shoulder therapy at Trinity Rehab

Who Gets Shoulder Injuries in Brick?

The Brick Golfer

Golf requires the shoulder to produce powerful, repeating rotation under load — dozens of times per round. The lead shoulder absorbs the force of impact, while the trail shoulder drives the backswing. Without adequate posterior shoulder flexibility, rotator cuff strength, and scapular stability, golfers develop impingement, AC joint irritation, and posterior labral stress over seasons. Brick golfers who enjoy golf at Forge Pond Golf Course but never do targeted shoulder conditioning are at particular risk.

The Brick Memorial and Brick Township High School Athlete

Brick Memorial and Brick Township High School athletes compete in baseball, softball, football, swimming — several of which are overhead-intensive sports. From youth through varsity, Brick athletes accumulate significant throwing and overhead volume. When shoulder conditioning lags behind training demand, rotator cuff tendinopathy and impingement become increasingly likely. At Trinity Rehab Brick, we help these athletes recover and build preventive programs for future seasons.

The Brick Worker

Brick’s workforce includes employers like Ocean Medical Center, Brick Township School District, Ocean County government offices. Workers in healthcare, manufacturing, warehousing, and office environments routinely perform tasks that load the shoulder — patient transfers, repetitive assembly, overhead stacking, and sustained computer-based arm positions. Occupational shoulder injuries are well-documented, and at Trinity Rehab Brick, we see this population regularly.

The Water and Fitness Enthusiast

Brick residents who enjoy kayaking/paddleboarding on Metedeconk River put their shoulders through repetitive overhead and rotational loading. The shoulder fatigue that accumulates during extended sessions can tip an otherwise manageable imbalance into an acute flare. Swimmers are particularly prone to impingement — a condition so common it’s sometimes called “swimmer’s shoulder.”

Patient performing shoulder rehabilitation exercises with resistance band

Treatment at Trinity Rehab Brick: Evidence-Based and Individually Tailored

Phase 1 — Accurate Assessment and Pain Relief (Weeks 1–2)

Every Brick patient starts with a comprehensive shoulder evaluation. Your physical therapist performs:

  • Full range of motion testing in all planes
  • Manual muscle testing of rotator cuff muscles in isolation
  • Orthopedic special tests to confirm or rule out specific structural involvement
  • Scapular kinematics assessment — how your shoulder blade tracks through arm elevation
  • Cervical and thoracic spine screening for referred pain contributions
  • Sport- or work-specific functional analysis

This evaluation determines your diagnosis — not just “shoulder pain,” but the specific tissue and movement dysfunction driving it. Your treatment plan is built on this foundation.

Early treatment addresses pain and inflammation through ice and heat modalities applied strategically around activity, therapeutic ultrasound for deep tissue heating and healing promotion, electrical stimulation for pain control, manual therapy including joint mobilization to restore early range of motion and soft tissue techniques for muscular tightness, and sleep position and daily activity modification to protect healing tissue.

Phase 2 — Rebuilding the Foundation (Weeks 2–6)

As pain decreases and mobility begins returning, the progressive strengthening program begins. For Brick patients, this phase is carefully calibrated to the demands they’ll return to:

  • Pendulum and gravity-assisted range of motion — decompression and gentle mobility
  • Posterior capsule stretching (sleeper stretch, cross-body reach) — essential for throwing athletes and golfers
  • Resistance band external rotation — fundamental rotator cuff strengthening
  • Scapular rows and retractions — restoring the lower trapezius activation critical to healthy shoulder mechanics
  • Prone Y, T, and W exercises — progressive posterior cuff and scapular loading
  • Wall slides — overhead mobility training with scapular control

Postural correction is integrated throughout for workers and anyone spending significant time in forward-head, rounded-shoulder positions.

Phase 3 — Return to Full Activity (Weeks 4–12)

The final phase builds sport- and work-specific strength and control. Brick athletes work through interval throwing programs and sport-specific progressions. Workers practice the specific mechanics of their occupational tasks with corrected technique and monitored loads. By discharge, every patient has a clear understanding of what caused their injury, a home exercise program to maintain their recovery, and sport- or work-specific guidance to prevent recurrence. If you also experience neck or spine discomfort, our team can help with back pain relief as well.

Physical therapist assessing shoulder range of motion at Trinity Rehab

Why Physical Therapy Outperforms the Alternatives

For most shoulder conditions, physical therapy is the evidence-based first-line treatment. Research shows:

  • PT is equivalent to surgery for many rotator cuff impingement and partial tear presentations
  • PT is the guideline-recommended treatment for frozen shoulder, with manual therapy and exercise dramatically accelerating resolution
  • PT produces more durable outcomes than cortisone injection alone for rotator cuff tendinopathy
  • For older adults and working patients, PT avoids the significant risks and extended recovery timelines associated with shoulder surgery

At Trinity Rehab Brick, we have seen these outcomes consistently. Patients who arrive prepared to hear “you need surgery” frequently leave having achieved full recovery through expert physical therapy.

Patient performing cross-body shoulder stretch in physical therapy clinic

Visit Our Brick, NJ Clinic

Our Brick, NJ clinic is equipped to provide comprehensive shoulder pain treatment in a welcoming, professional environment. Take a look inside:

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Frequently Asked Questions — Shoulder Pain Treatment in Brick, NJ

Learn more about shoulder pain relief at Trinity Rehab.

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