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  • Shoulder · Condition

    Rotator Cuff Tear

    The rotator cuff is the group of muscles and tendons that lift and rotate your arm. Tears are common with age and overuse — and respond well to the right plan.

    summarize At a glance
    Affected area
    Shoulder — tendons
    Common in
    Adults over 40, overhead work
    Typical treatment
    Rehab or repair
    Recovery
    3–6 months
    Shoulder anatomy
    01

    What is a rotator cuff tear?

    The rotator cuff is a group of four muscles and their tendons that wrap around the top of the arm bone, holding it in the shoulder socket and powering lifting and rotation.

    A tear means one or more of these tendons has partially or completely pulled away from the bone. It may happen suddenly — from a fall or lifting injury — or develop gradually as the tendon wears thin with age, which is far more common.

    02

    Signs and symptoms

    • checkPain on the outer shoulder, often worse at night and when lying on that side.
    • checkWeakness lifting or rotating the arm, especially overhead.
    • checkDifficulty with overhead tasks — reaching a shelf, brushing hair, dressing.
    • checkA crackling sensation when moving the shoulder in certain positions.
    • checkLoss of strength that can make the arm feel unreliable.
    03

    Causes & risk factors

    • Age-related tendon degeneration (most common over 50).
    • Repetitive overhead activity — painting, construction, certain sports.
    • A single traumatic injury, such as a fall onto the arm.
    • Reduced blood supply to the tendon with age.
    • Bony spurs that rub and fray the tendon over time.
    04

    How it is diagnosed

    Examination tests the strength and range of each cuff muscle to localise the problem. Ultrasound and MRI both visualise the tendons — confirming whether a tear is partial or full-thickness, its size, and the quality of the muscle, all of which guide treatment.

    05

    Treatment options

    Many tears — particularly partial and degenerative ones — are managed successfully without surgery. The decision balances tear size, your age, activity and how much the shoulder limits you.

    self_improvementNon-surgical

    Physiotherapy

    A structured programme strengthens the surrounding muscles to compensate and reduce pain — effective for many partial tears.

    healingSurgical

    Arthroscopic repair

    The torn tendon is reattached to the bone through keyhole incisions, restoring strength for larger or full-thickness tears.

    schedule

    Timing matters

    Larger acute tears in active patients are often best repaired sooner rather than later — a long-standing tear can retract and become harder to fix. A timely assessment keeps your options open.

    06

    Recovery & outlook

    After a repair, the shoulder is protected in a sling while the tendon heals to the bone — this early protection is essential. A staged programme then rebuilds motion and strength over three to six months. Most patients regain comfortable, functional shoulders and return to the activities that matter to them.

    Medically reviewed by
    Dr. Yousef Muhammad, M.D.
    Senior Consultant · Orthopedic Surgery & Sports Medicine

    German board-certified orthopedic surgeon specialising in arthroscopic knee and shoulder surgery, sports injuries, and joint replacement.

    M.D. · PhD
    FEBOT · DGOOC
    AAOS · ESSKA
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