Shoulder blade pain

Introduction

Introduction The scapula is also called the humerus and the tibia. Located behind the thorax, it is a triangular flat bone between the 2nd to 7th ribs. Scapular pain is caused by long-term deformation of the muscles. It may also be caused by chronic muscle inflammation due to a long-term posture.

Cause

Cause

Caused by long-term deformation of muscles.

Examine

an examination

Related inspection

X-ray examination of mammography

Pain in the arm and pain in the shoulder blade.

Diagnosis

Differential diagnosis

1. Shoulder and back pain: There are many patients with back pain. The common cause is local bone or soft tissue disease of the shoulder. Others have scapular pain caused by organ disease that is reflected to the shoulders or other parts of the tumor and transferred to the shoulders and back. Therefore, after the treatment, the back pain can not shoulder pain, shoulder pain, medical back, blind massage, scraping, cupping and other treatment methods, so that patients lose the best treatment opportunity.

2, severe shoulder pain: often caused by dislocation of the shoulder joint. There is a clear history of trauma.

3, shoulder involvement pain: due to visceral disease, causing shoulder pain, or hyperalgesia, known as suffering. Symptoms appear to be slow, dull, or uncomfortable. They do not completely conform to the nerve direction, the area is blurred, and the pain is blurred.

4, dull pain and radiation pain in the shoulder area: the dull pain and radiation pain in the shoulder area is the clinical manifestation of the suprascapular nerve compression syndrome. Scapular nerve compression is one of the most common causes of shoulder pain. Some scholars abroad believe that this sign accounts for 1% to 2% of all patients with shoulder pain.

5, shoulder pain and discomfort: shoulder pain and discomfort, also known as leaking shoulder wind, shoulder joint inflammation, fifty shoulders, and its shoulder joint dysfunction is also known as the frozen shoulder.

The material in this site is intended to be of general informational use and is not intended to constitute medical advice, probable diagnosis, or recommended treatments.

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