The VerdictHIGH CONVICTIONVerdict Score 78

Most torn rotator cuffs heal with the right exercises — surgery is rarely the first answer.

Right now, squeeze your shoulder blades together and hold for 5 seconds. Repeat 10 times. That's the first exercise in the rehab protocol that helps 7 out of 10 people avoid surgery.

  1. Here's what's really happening: Two or more tendons in your shoulder's stabilizing sleeve have worn thin over time — and for women, falling estrogen levels after menopause speed this up.
  2. What most people get wrong: An MRI showing a tear doesn't mean you need surgery — 7 out of 10 people with this exact problem get back to full function with rehab alone.
  3. Start here: Gentle pendulum swings and shoulder blade squeezes daily for the first 4 weeks, then gradually add resistance band exercises.

Your rotator cuff is like four rubber bands holding a ball centered in a cup. Over time, the rubber bands thin and fray — not from one big snap, but from years of small stretches. When two bands go, the ball slides out of center and grinds against the rim. But here's the thing: you can train the remaining bands and the muscles around the cup to take over the job. The pain isn't the fraying — it's your shoulder telling you the balance is off.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Multi-Tendon Degenerative Rotator Cuff Tear

Shoulder — Women-Specific Deep Dive

Conviction: HIGH

Right now, squeeze your shoulder blades together and hold for 5 seconds. Repeat 10 times.

Scapular squeezes are the first exercise in the MOON protocol — the rehab program that helps 7 out of 10 people with this tear avoid surgery.

Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.

Most torn rotator cuffs heal with the right exercises — surgery is rarely the first answer.

Your rotator cuff is like four rubber bands holding a ball centered in a cup. Over time, the rubber bands thin and fray — not from one big snap, but from years of small stretches. When two bands go, the ball slides out of center and grinds against the rim. But here's the thing: you can train the remaining bands and the muscles around the cup to take over the job. The pain isn't the fraying — it's your shoulder telling you the balance is off.

  1. Here's what's really happening: Two or more tendons in your shoulder's stabilizing sleeve have worn thin over time — and for women, falling estrogen levels after menopause speed this up.
  2. What most people get wrong: An MRI showing a tear doesn't mean you need surgery — 7 out of 10 people with this exact problem get back to full function with rehab alone.
  3. Start here: Gentle pendulum swings and shoulder blade squeezes daily for the first 4 weeks, then gradually add resistance band exercises.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

What Works

Shoulder rehabilitation progressive loading

Tier 1 — Strong Evidence

Progressive exercise rehabilitation (MOON protocol) STRONG

Phased from passive range of motion to active loading over 4-6 months. Focus on scapular stabilizers and glenohumeral rotator strengthening. Avoid empty-can/full-can exercises.

Source: JOSPT 2022/2025 CPG, MOON Shoulder Group 10-year longitudinal cohort (70-75% non-operative success rate). Timeline: pain reduction 4-8 weeks, functional recovery 3-6 months, full rehabilitation 6-14 months.

Patient education and expectation management STRONG

Structured education that structural damage doesn't predict functional outcome. Address MRI anxiety.

Source: MOON 10-year data — patient beliefs were the strongest predictor of conservative vs surgical pathway.

See Tier 2 and Tier 3 treatments

Tier 2 — Moderate Evidence

Short-term NSAIDs/acetaminophen MODERATE

For pain relief to enable active participation in rehabilitation. Not standalone treatment. Short-term use only (JOSPT 2025).

Corticosteroid injection (ultrasound-guided) MODERATE

Single injection for severe pain preventing rehab participation. Maximum 2 injections. Not first-line. No long-term benefit.

Tier 3 — Clinical Experience / Emerging

Manual therapy (adjunct) EMERGING

Glenohumeral and scapulothoracic joint mobilizations alongside exercise. Small additive effect. Never standalone.

Taping EMERGING

Short-term neuromuscular facilitation or pain modulation. Not disease-modifying.

What Doesn't Work

  • Therapeutic ultrasound — explicitly NOT recommended by JOSPT 2025 for rotator cuff tears. Zero evidence of benefit.
  • Shock wave therapy (ESWT) — only works for calcific tendinopathy. Not indicated for degenerative tears.
  • Empty-can / full-can exercises — MOON protocol explicitly forbids these for torn rotator cuffs. High risk of further tendon shearing.
  • Subacromial decompression as first-line — no functional benefit over PT alone (effect size below clinically meaningful difference).

Exercise Prescription

Pendulum Swings

2 sets each direction | 2x daily
Lean forward, let sore arm hang. Swing gently in circles, forward/back, side to side. Shoulder muscles completely relaxed.

Scapular Squeezes

3 x 10 | Daily
Squeeze shoulder blades together like holding a pencil between them. Hold 5 seconds, relax.

Stick-Assisted Elevation

3 x 10 | Daily
Lying on back, hold broomstick with both hands. Good arm pushes sore arm overhead. Go only as far as comfortable.

Side-Lying External Rotation

3 x 12-15 | 3x/week
Lie on good side, towel roll under elbow. Rotate forearm upward toward ceiling keeping elbow pinned. Mild effort OK, stop if sharp pain.

Band Internal Rotation

3 x 12-15 | 3x/week
Elbow bent 90 degrees, arm at side. Rotate forearm inward across body against resistance band. No pain above 3/10.

Wall Slides

3 x 8-10 | Daily
Facing wall, slide hands up as high as comfortable. Keep shoulder blades pulled down. Track height progress weekly.

Return to Training

Red Flags — When to Refer

  • Sudden total inability to lift arm after a fall or trauma — possible acute massive tear extension. Urgent orthopedic referral within 48 hours (tendon retraction risk).
  • Fever, severe redness, unusual warmth, pus — possible joint infection/septic arthritis. Emergency department immediately.
  • Constant, unrelenting pain unaffected by position + unexplained weight loss — malignancy screen. Urgent GP referral.
  • Persistent numbness, tingling, or radiating pain below the elbow — neurological referral to rule out cervical or brachial plexus pathology.
  • Visible deformity + total inability to move after trauma — possible dislocation/fracture. Emergency department.

What's Actually Going On

Rotator cuff anatomy showing multi-tendon degeneration

The rotator cuff is four muscles that wrap around the ball of your upper arm bone like a fitted sleeve, keeping it centered in the socket during every movement. Their job is simple: hold the ball in the cup while the big muscles (deltoid, pectorals) do the heavy lifting.

In a multi-tendon degenerative tear, two or more of these tendons have gradually worn through. The supraspinatus goes first (it's in the tightest spot with the worst blood supply), and the infraspinatus or subscapularis follows. When two tendons fail, the shoulder loses its force couples — the balanced push-pull system that keeps everything centered.

Healthy cuff
Ball stays centered in socket. Force couples balanced. Full pain-free movement.
Multi-tendon tear
Ball migrates upward. Space narrows. Pain with overhead movement, weakness in rotation.

For women, there's an extra factor: estrogen decline during perimenopause and menopause accelerates collagen breakdown in tendons. This is why degenerative rotator cuff tears become more common in women after age 50.

The good news: the shoulder is remarkably adaptable. By strengthening the scapular stabilizers and the remaining rotator cuff muscles, most people can restore functional balance without repairing the torn tendons.

How to Identify It

Shoulder assessment clinical examination

What patients typically say

"My shoulder aches all the time, it's weak when I try to lift things overhead, and it wakes me up at night."

Key clinical tests

Use a cluster of 3+ tests. High specificity tests (Drop Arm, External Rotation Lag, Lift-Off) rule IN tears. High sensitivity tests (Jobe's, Belly-Press) are for screening.

Key differentiator

Active range of motion is limited or weak, but passive range is preserved — unlike frozen shoulder where both are restricted. No cervical spine reproduction on Spurling's test — unlike referred neck pain.

The Debate

Surgery for all full-thickness tears?

Traditional Practice (pre-2020)

Surgery preferred for all full-thickness tears to prevent progression and fatty infiltration.

VS

MOON Shoulder Group + JOSPT 2025

70-75% of atraumatic full-thickness tears successfully managed with PT alone at 10-year follow-up. No significant tear progression or fatty infiltration within first year of PT.

Follow MOON protocol — conservative management first for all atraumatic degenerative tears. Surgery reserved for failed PT (6+ months) or acute traumatic tears.

Subacromial decompression — does it help?

Historical Standard of Care

Subacromial decompression considered necessary to "create space" for the rotator cuff.

VS

Kukkonen 2014 RCT + JOSPT 2025 CPG

Surgery + PT no better than PT alone. Effect size: 5.6 Constant score points — below the minimum clinically important difference.

JOSPT 2025 explicitly recommends against subacromial decompression. The traditional "impingement" model has been largely replaced by intrinsic tendon degeneration theory.

How effective is PT really?

General Clinical Belief

Physical therapy viewed as highly superior to doing nothing.

VS

Cochrane Review 2016

Exercise and manual therapy showed only a 6.8-point difference on a 100-point pain scale vs placebo.

The effect is real but modest in pooled data. Patient engagement, education, and loading compliance are the critical moderators — not just "doing exercises."

Honest Limitations

Patient beliefs predict outcomes more than the exercises themselves

The research: MOON 10-year study found patients who believed PT would work had successful outcomes. Those who didn't opted for surgery within 6 months.

The gap: Many patients anchor to their MRI findings — "my tendons are torn, I need surgery." The fear from imaging language significantly worsens real-world outcomes.

What to do about it: Front-load education before exercises. Explain that tear size on MRI doesn't predict pain or function. Use phrases like: "your tendons have worn like the knees on a pair of jeans — it's normal aging, and we can make you stronger and pain-free without fixing every thread."

Function improves — but the tear may still grow

The research: 70%+ of patients recover functionally with conservative management.

The gap: 37% of conservatively managed tears grow larger by 5mm+ on 5-year ultrasound. If a patient later wants surgery, the window may close due to irreversible fatty infiltration and retraction.

What to do about it: Have an honest conversation upfront. Under 55 and very active? Give rehab 6 months, then reassess surgical timing if goals aren't met. Over 60 and wanting pain-free daily life? Conservative is almost certainly the right path.

Home exercise compliance drops without supervision

The research: MOON protocol success rates are based on structured, supervised programs with high compliance (3x/week strengthening, daily range of motion).

The gap: Real-world home exercise compliance drops significantly without direct supervision.

What to do about it: Build compliance systems: video demonstrations, weekly check-in texts, exercise logging. First 6-8 weeks should include supervised sessions. Graduate to home-based only after competency and consistency are demonstrated.

The Nuance

Conservative management works for 70-75% of people — but that statistic hides important details. Atraumatic (gradual wear) tears have an 84% success rate with PT, while traumatic tears have only 16%. The type of tear matters more than the size.

The surgery conversation is age-dependent. For women under 55 who are very active, a 6-month PT trial is the right starting point — but don't wait years if goals aren't met, because the tendon retracts and the muscle fills with fat, making surgical repair harder or impossible.

For women over 60, conservative management is almost certainly the right path. The surgical complication rate increases with age, re-tear rates after repair run 15-30%, and functional outcomes with PT are excellent for daily-life activities.

The strongest predictor of outcome isn't the tear size or the exercises — it's whether the patient believes rehab will work. Managing expectations and addressing MRI anxiety upfront is as important as the exercise prescription.

What would change this protocol: A large RCT (n>300) in women aged 45-65 showing heavy eccentric loading outperforms the MOON protocol in both functional outcomes AND structural arrest of fatty infiltration on 5-year MRI follow-up.

Sources

JOSPT 2022/2025 Clinical Practice Guideline — Current authoritative CPG for rotator cuff tendinopathy. Recommends against subacromial decompression, against therapeutic ultrasound, exercise-first approach.
MOON Shoulder Group, 10-year longitudinal study (n=452) — 70-75% conservative success rate for atraumatic full-thickness tears. Patient beliefs strongest outcome predictor.
Kukkonen 2014 RCT — Subacromial decompression + PT no better than PT alone. Effect size 5.6 Constant score points, below MCID.
Heerspink 2015 RCT — No significant tear progression or fatty infiltration within first year of conservative management.
Cochrane Review 2016 — Exercise/manual therapy modest effect over placebo (6.8 points on 100-point scale). Methodological limitations noted.
Conviction: HIGH
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Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

78 Mixed evidence
80–100Strong evidence
60–79Mixed but supportive ◀
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

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