Frozen Shoulder vs. Rotator Cuff Tear

Frozen Shoulder vs. Rotator Cuff Tear

Frozen shoulder is a stiff capsule that blocks motion. Rotator cuff tears are tendon injuries that sap strength. Both make lifting hard, but their fixes differ.

Side-by-side

Item Frozen Shoulder Rotator Cuff Tear
Problem area Joint capsule stiffness Tendon damage
Main symptom Global stiffness, motion blocked Weakness, pain in certain angles
If someone moves it for you Still stuck Moves, but may hurt
Night pain Very common Possible
Typical age 40s–60s 50s+ (degenerative), or acute injury
Natural course May improve over 1–2 years Rarely heals fully on its own

Simple self-checks

Frozen shoulder signs

  • Every direction feels blocked.
  • Even with help, it won’t move far.
  • Behind-the-back reach is very limited.
  • Deep night ache wakes you.

Rotator cuff tear signs

  • Motion is possible but weak.
  • Moves better when assisted.
  • Pain at specific angles.
  • Arm may drop when lifting.

You can have both

Longstanding cuff issues can trigger frozen shoulder. Ultrasound and movement testing clarify which to treat first.

Treat based on the root

  • Frozen shoulder: release capsular adhesions and restore range.
  • Rotator cuff: reduce inflammation, rebuild tendon strength.

Stiff or weak shoulder?

We’ll check if it’s frozen shoulder, rotator cuff, or both, then map the right treatment.

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