From what I've read and been told, it depends (fortunately my Ortho is also a family friend and shoulder expert (I use the term loosely, is any doctor really an expert?) - but competition level kayakers fly in for him to work on them).SCIN wrote:But won't a tear heal with time?Rags wrote:PT won't repair a tear.
In a young, healthy individual: a small tear may stabilize to the point that you don't even know you have a tear. These aren't like micro tears in muscles that heal, but rather like a rough edge that seals itself. A large tear will not stabilize, but can be fixed through surgery with a very high percentage of returning to 100%.
The older you are, the worse it gets. And if you aren't healthy (smoker, overuse and weakened tendons, repeated cortisone injections rather than a proper fix), you're chances of tearing are more likely and recovery is harder as there won't be as much healthy material for a surgeon to put you back together with.
I think the only real way to know what you have (how bad is the tear) is through an MRI.
I'm not a doctor, and don't even play one on TV; that's my understanding for what it's worth.
Can anybody out there elaborate?