Ep. 050 | The Unstable Shoulder | Anju Jaggi

In this episode we will talk about all things shoulder instability. You will learn more about the Stanmore classification and structural damage after dislocations. We will discuss the typical patient with shoulder instability and how an examination process looks like. We will touch on muscle activation patterns, surgery and how physiotherapeutic management of a patient with shoulder instability could possibly look like. So make sure to listen to the whole episode! Our guest is Anju Jaggi. She is a physio consultant shoulder specialist at the royal national orthopedic  hospital in stanmore, UK. She’s a past president of the European Society of  Shoulder & Elbow Rehabilitation (EUSSER) and a published researcher with a particular interest in shoulder instability.   Content 0:00:00 - 0:01:08 Introduction 0:01:08 - 0:02:32 What is Shoulder Instability? 0:02:32 - 0:05:50 What causes the shoulder pain? 0:05:50 - 0:13:44 TUBS/AMBRI/Neuromuscular 0:13:45 - 0:18:13 What gets damaged in the shoulder? 0:18:13 - 0:22:22 The typical patient fenotype 0:22:22 - 0:28:55 Examination Process 0:28:55 - 0:30:05 Special testing 0:30:55 - 0:34:29 How to test the cuff 0:34:29 - 0:37:16 When is the cuff weak? 0:37:16 - 0:40:05 Muscle activation patterns 0:40:05 - 0:43:30 Risk factors 0:43:30 - 0:46:14 Risk of Developing OA 0:46:14 - 0:47:58 Relocating a shoulder as physio 0:47:58 - 0:55:02 Shoulder Instability Rehab 0:55:02 - 1:00:21 Surgery vs. Physio 1:00:21 - 1:01:38 Anju's closing thoughts 1:01:38 - 1:03:10 Outro   Bonus Material To view and download the bonus content such as transcripts of this episode become a Physiotutors Member. All episodes and bonus content can be found here   Follow our Podcast on: Spotify | Apple Podcasts

Om Podcasten

The Physiotutors podcast is your opportunity to hear from some of the best physio's, researchers, lecturers and medical professionals for all things physiotherapy related. Join us as we discuss topics from orthopedics to pain management, from spinal cord to respiratory all in the name of physiotherapy.