Shoulder Pain When Lifting Your Arm: Causes, Diagnosis & Evidence-Based Treatment in Singapore

Why Does Your Shoulder Hurt When You Lift Your Arm?

If you feel pain raising your arm overhead, you’re not alone.

You may notice:

  • Pain when reaching up (e.g. shelves, dressing)
  • A “painful arc” midway through lifting
  • Weakness or hesitation with overhead movement
  • Relief when lowering the arm

👉 This pattern often reflects rotator cuff load sensitivity and movement control issues, not necessarily a serious tear.


What Happens in Your Shoulder When You Lift Your Arm?

The shoulder relies on a coordinated system:

  • Rotator cuff muscles stabilise the joint
  • Shoulder blade (scapula) positions the arm
  • Joint structures tolerate load through range

👉 When this system is overloaded or poorly coordinated:
pain + weakness + altered movement can occur.


Common Causes of Shoulder Pain When Lifting

1. Rotator Cuff Load Sensitivity (Most Common)

  • Tendons become sensitive to load
  • Pain during lifting, especially mid-range

2. Subacromial Pain Syndrome (Impingement-Related)

  • Reduced space for tendons during lifting
  • Pain in a specific arc

3. Muscle Weakness or Imbalance

  • Rotator cuff not strong enough
  • Overuse of larger muscles

4. Movement Control Issues

  • Poor coordination between shoulder and shoulder blade
  • Increased stress on tissues

5. Less Common: Structural Tears

  • Larger tendon tears may cause:
    • Significant weakness
    • Difficulty lifting arm

👉 Most cases involve:
load mismatch + tendon sensitivity + movement control


🧠 Pain Science Cornerstone (Biopsychosocial Model)

Shoulder pain is influenced by:

  • Biological: tendon load, muscle strength
  • Psychological: fear of lifting, guarding
  • Lifestyle: activity levels, repetitive overhead use

Key takeaways:

  • Pain does not always mean a tear
  • Tendons adapt to load over time
  • Avoidance can worsen capacity

⚠️ When Should You Seek Assessment?

You should seek evaluation if:

  • Pain persists beyond a few weeks
  • You cannot lift your arm properly
  • There is significant weakness
  • Pain worsens over time
  • You are unsure of the cause

1. Diagnosis First: What’s Causing Your Shoulder Pain?

At The Pain Relief Clinic:

  • A structured clinical assessment is performed
  • Shoulder movement and strength are evaluated
  • Rotator cuff and scapular control are assessed

Imaging (ultrasound or MRI) may be arranged within 1 working day when appropriate if:

  • Symptoms persist
  • There is significant weakness
  • Diagnosis is unclear

👉 This helps differentiate:

  • Tendon-related pain
  • Movement-related issues
  • Structural tears

2. Progressive Loading & Rehabilitation (Core Foundation)

The key to recovery is:

Progressive Rotator Cuff Strengthening

The goal is to:
👉 Restore your ability to lift your arm without pain


Why This Matters

  • Avoiding lifting → reduced capacity
  • Overloading → flare-ups
  • Gradual progression → tendon adaptation

Active Rehabilitation May Include:

  • Rotator cuff strengthening exercises
  • Scapular (shoulder blade) control training
  • Gradual overhead loading exercises
  • Movement retraining
  • Load progression planning

👉 The aim is to build a shoulder that can handle overhead activity.

Rehabilitation is progressed step-by-step based on tolerance.


3. Activity & Movement Strategies

Helpful adjustments include:

  • Avoid sudden heavy overhead lifting
  • Use controlled movements
  • Gradually increase load
  • Maintain regular activity

👉 Smart loading supports recovery.


4. Medication: Supporting Function

Medication may help:

  • Reduce pain
  • Allow continued movement

First-Line Options

  • Paracetamol
  • NSAIDs (topical or oral)

Second-Line Options

  • COX-2 inhibitors
  • Short-term oral opioids (used cautiously)

👉 Used to support rehabilitation, not as a long-term solution.


5. Injection Options (When Needed)

If symptoms persist:

  • Subacromial injections
  • Shoulder joint injections

👉 These aim to:

  • Reduce pain
  • Enable rehabilitation

6. Physiotherapy: Active + Passive Integrated Care

At The Pain Relief Clinic:

Delivered by MOH AHPC-Licensed Physiotherapists


Active Rehabilitation (Core)

  • Strengthening
  • Movement retraining
  • Progressive loading

Passive / Adjunct Modalities

  • Soft tissue techniques
  • Pain-modulating therapies

👉 Passive care supports—but does not replace—active rehab.


7. Integrated, Team-Based Care

At The Pain Relief Clinic:

  • Care is led by Dr. Terence Tan, SMC-licensed doctor with over 20 years’ experience
  • Closely coordinated with physiotherapists

Care includes:

  • Diagnosis
  • Progressive rehabilitation
  • Pain science education
  • Load and activity management

The goal is restoring strength, movement, and confidence in overhead use.


8. When Is Specialist Referral Needed?

Referral to orthopaedic or shoulder specialists is arranged when:

  • There is significant weakness
  • Structural tear is suspected
  • Symptoms persist despite conservative care

Final Takeaway

Shoulder pain when lifting your arm is common—and often manageable.

A structured approach includes:

  1. Accurate diagnosis
  2. Pain science understanding
  3. Progressive loading rehabilitation
  4. Rotator cuff and scapular strengthening
  5. Medication or injections when needed
  6. Integrated doctor + physiotherapist care

👉 Modern MSK care focuses on building a strong, resilient shoulder—not just avoiding movement.


FAQ

Q1: Does this mean I have a rotator cuff tear?
Not always—many cases are due to load sensitivity, not tears.

Q2: Should I avoid lifting my arm?
No—gradual loading is more effective.

Q3: Will this heal on its own?
Some cases improve, but rehab speeds recovery.

Q4: Can physiotherapy help?
Yes, especially for strength and movement control.