Postoperative Rotator Cuff Repair
Cross-source consensus on Postoperative Rotator Cuff Repair from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
Uses
Dosage & preparation
Risks & contraindications
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- Postoperative rotator cuff repair requires non-negotiable respect for healing constraints. — Rotator Cuff Rehabilitation, Pelvic Tilt, and Clinical Referrals
- Active contraction of the repaired rotator cuff too early may increase re-tear risk. — Rotator Cuff Rehabilitation, Pelvic Tilt, and Clinical Referrals
- Typical repairs involve about six weeks without active movement of the repaired arm. — Rotator Cuff Rehabilitation, Pelvic Tilt, and Clinical Referrals
- Athletes in later-stage rotator cuff rehabilitation need progression toward fast, throwing-like or overhead tasks when relevant. — Rotator Cuff Rehabilitation, Pelvic Tilt, and Clinical Referrals
- A representative postoperative progression moves from passive motion to assisted motion, active motion, and then loading. — Rotator Cuff Rehabilitation, Pelvic Tilt, and Clinical Referrals
- Ribcage manual work and breathing activities may be useful early after repair because they can influence shoulder range without active contraction of the repaired shoulder. — Rotator Cuff Rehabilitation, Pelvic Tilt, and Clinical Referrals
- Early passive range of motion after repair is treated as a possible re-tear risk, but the cited evidence is not detailed. — Rotator Cuff Rehabilitation, Pelvic Tilt, and Clinical Referrals