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Frozen Shoulder: Symptoms, Stages & Treatment

Frozen Shoulder: Symptoms, Stages & Treatment

Last reviewed:

Written By

Last Reviewed

16/05/2025

Time to Read

8โ€“12 minutes

Frozen shoulder isnโ€™t just โ€˜a bit of stiffness.โ€™ Itโ€™s frustration when you canโ€™t:

  • Fasten a bra
  • Reach into a cupboard
  • Sleep comfortably at night

Written and reviewed by Christopher Joseph Burdon, DC. Christopher is a registered practising chiropractor and founder of Active Health Hub. He holds a Master of Chiropractic from the Anglo-European College of Chiropractic and is registered with the General Chiropractic Council, registration number 03033. Learn more about Christopher.

What this page will help you understand

  • What frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis) actually is
  • The typical symptoms and three phases of recovery
  • How frozen shoulder differs from impingement and rotator cuff problems
  • Why recovery often takes time and cannot be rushed
  • How daily habits and workstation setup can aggravate symptoms
  • What exercise principles are most helpful at each stage
  • When you should seek further assessment

Itโ€™s the slow loss of movement that chips away at your confidence and independence.

As a chiropractor for nearly 20 years, Iโ€™ve seen how this condition affects more than just the jointโ€”it affects your daily life.ย 

The good newsโ€ฆ With the right advice, targeted mobility work and a structured recovery plan, frozen shoulder doesnโ€™t have to define your future movement.

When it comes to a frozen shoulder, you cannot rush recovery.

But you can support it properly.

What is Frozen Shoulder?

Frozen shoulder occurs when the capsule surrounding the shoulder joint becomes inflamed and thickened.

This leads to:

  • Progressive stiffness
  • Loss of movement in multiple directions
  • Pain at end range

The key distinction is global restriction.

Even passive movement (when someone else tries to move it) feels blocked.

This is why aggressive stretching often makes early symptoms worse.

Common Frozen Shoulder Symptoms

These are the common symptoms of frozen shoulder that I see in clinic:

  • Gradual loss of shoulder movement in ALL directions
  • Inability to reach overhead
  • Difficulty fastening clothing behind the back
  • Discomfort in bed
  • Sharp pains in the shoulder joint when overstretched
  • A feeling of the joint being stuck

It often develops without a clear injury.

Which makes it confusing โ€” but not unusual.

The Three Phases of Frozen Shoulder

  1. Freezing Phase (2-9 months)

Increasing pain and gradual movement loss.

  1. Frozen Phase (4-12 months)

Less inflammation, significant stiffness.

  1. Thawing Phase (6 to 24 months)

Gradual return of mobility.

Most cases resolve over 12โ€“24 months. I know itโ€™s sometimes difficult to imagine it getting better, but understanding this reduces unnecessary anxiety.

TRUE STORY: One of my patients had a fall a few years back and badly broke her wrist. Due to the nature of the break, it took a long time to heal and she was unable to use that arm much.ย 

Unfortunately, as time went on, the poor lady developed shoulder pain that gradually turned into a frozen shoulder! Her shoulder ended up taking longer to heal than the breakโ€ฆ but she made a full recovery from both after 18 months.

How Frozen Shoulder Differs From Shoulder Impingement

One mistake I see often is shoulder conditions being wrongly diagnosed.ย 

In particular, impingement syndrome and rotator cuff injuries can sometimes be thought to be a frozen shoulder.ย 

However, there are some clear differences:

  • Frozen shoulder restricts movement in ALL directions .
  • Impingement tends to produce pain in specific ranges.
  • After the initial freezing phase, frozen shoulder is more โ€˜stiffโ€™ rather than painful

Wrong diagnosis ย  ย  = ย  ย  ย  Wrong management

Please read my impingement syndrome and rotator cuff injury pages if you are still not sure about your diagnosis LINK

What Causes Frozen Shoulder?

Frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis) is more common in:

  • People aged 40โ€“60
  • Individuals with diabetes
  • Thyroid dysfunction
  • After immobilisation

Sometimes there is no obvious trigger.

That unpredictability is part of the condition.

Clinic Pattern I See Repeatedly

Many patients try to โ€œstretch it outโ€ too early.

During the freezing phase, this often increases irritation.

What works better is matching effort to stage:

  • Calm inflammation early
  • Maintain gentle mobility
  • Progress strengthening gradually

Frozen shoulder improves steadily when managed appropriately.

But impatience often prolongs discomfort.

Why Your Daily Environment Matters More Than You Think

Frozen shoulder is not purely caused by load.

But daily positioning can absolutely aggravate it.

If you are working 6โ€“8 hours per day with:

  • Unsupported arms
  • Rounded shoulders
  • Static posture

โ€ฆyou are likely increasing capsular strain repeatedly.

That wonโ€™t cause frozen shoulder.

But it can prolong irritation.ย 

This is where subtle environmental adjustments make a noticeable difference.ย 

Workstation Setupโ€”the Hidden Costs of Sitting Poorly

The aim is not to โ€œfixโ€ frozen shoulder with equipment.

The aim is to reduce repeated strain while the capsule recovers.ย 

If you donโ€™t do this, itโ€™s like picking at a scab and wondering why the wound wonโ€™t heal.

Ergonomic Chairs (Arm Support Is Not Optional)

If youโ€™re spending 6โ€“8 hours a day at a desk, your chair becomes part of your treatment plan.

For frozen shoulder, the key features matter:

  • Adjustable armrestsย 
  • Solid adjustable lumbar support
  • Slight recline function (100โ€“110ยฐ)
  • Stable seat depth
  • Comfortable padding youโ€™ll actually tolerate long term

Without proper arm support, your shoulder muscles remain subtly active all day, just holding your arm up. That low-level load can significantly increase end-of-day stiffness and discomfort.

Kitchen table setups might save money upfront โ€” but they often cost you in flare-ups.

This is the chair I recommend to my patients because it ticks all the above boxes, is well built, and holds up over time. LINK PLUS PICTURE of chair

If you work full time at a desk, this isnโ€™t a minor detailโ€”itโ€™s daily load management.

Are you still feeding the flare-up?

During the freezing phase, prolonged fixed posture often increases discomfort.

A rotating laptop desk gives you a different option that allows you to work comfortably LYING DOWN. This does three things:

  • Reduces gravitational load on the shoulder
  • Minimizes repetitive reaching and forward posture
  • Allows you to work in a โ€˜calmโ€™ position during painful periods

Are you modifying load during sensitive phases?

If not, you may be undoing recovery for 6-8 hours per day.

The adjustable laptop desk I recommend to patients is listed on my Product Page HERE

Variation protects the joint during sensitive phases.

Frozen Shoulder Treatment and Exercise Principles

Effective frozen shoulder treatment focuses on:

  • Gentle mobility within tolerance
  • Avoiding aggressive end-range stretching early
  • Gradual strengthening during thawing

With frozen shoulder, the instinct is to protect itโ€”hold it still, avoid using it, brace against impact.

But prolonged guarding can also reinforce stiffness. The shoulder capsule is already tightening. When movement drops further, two things happen:

  • The joint loses even more mobility
  • The surrounding muscles become weaker and more protective

Gentle regular movement helps:

  • Maintain circulation
  • Reduce excessive muscle guardingย 
  • Reminds the nervous system that the shoulder is still required to be of service.

STEP ONE is to start with these mobilisation exercises LINK.

Then progress on to these muscle activation exercises LINK.

Remember, doing just a little every day will give you the best chance of a quicker recovery. Make sure you follow my exercises โ€œDoโ€™s and Donโ€™tsโ€ carefully.

When to Seek Further Help

Seek assessment if you experience:

  • Sudden trauma
  • Marked weakness
  • Severe, unrelenting pain
  • Rapid progression with systemic symptoms such as fatigue and unexplained weight loss
  • Uncertainty about diagnosis

Accurate diagnosis ensures appropriate management.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does frozen shoulder last?

Most cases take 12โ€“24 months to fully resolve, though steady improvement is typical.

Can frozen shoulder heal without treatment?

Yes, but structured management improves comfort and function during recovery.

Is surgery required?

Rarely. Most cases are managed conservatively.

Should I stretch through the stiffness?

Gentle mobility is helpful. Aggressive stretching in early stages often aggravates symptoms.

Final Thoughts

Frozen shoulder is restrictive โ€” but predictable.

It is not usually caused by posture.

It is not primarily a tendon issue.

It is a capsular restriction that improves over time. The most important things are to:

  • Reduce repeated strain.
  • Match exercise effort to phase.
  • Stay consistent.

That supports recovery.

When to seek urgent help

Seek urgent medical advice if pain is severe, worsening, linked with a fall or injury, or comes with fever, unexplained weight loss, chest pain, shortness of breath, new problems with bladder or bowel control, numbness around the saddle area, progressive weakness, or symptoms that feel unusual for you.

If you are unsure whether symptoms are serious, it is safer to contact NHS 111, your GP, or emergency services depending on severity.

Medical disclaimer

This article is for general education only and is not a diagnosis or a substitute for personalised medical advice. If your symptoms are severe, worsening, unusual, or linked with trauma, fever, unexplained weight loss, changes in bladder or bowel control, saddle numbness, progressive weakness, chest pain, or shortness of breath, seek urgent medical help.

Exercises should feel comfortable and controlled. Stop if pain spreads, symptoms worsen, or you feel unwell. For individual advice, book an assessment with a registered healthcare professional.

Read the full medical disclaimer.

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