What does shoulder impingement feel like?
A sharp catch or ache when lifting the arm — especially mid-range — reaching overhead, into a jacket sleeve, or across the body; often a dull ache down the outer arm afterwards, and discomfort lying on the shoulder.
Is impingement the same as a rotator cuff tear?
They’re related but different: impingement is the irritation process; a tear is structural damage. Longstanding, poorly managed impingement can progress toward cuff damage — one good reason to treat it properly and early.
Do I need surgery to “make more space” in my shoulder?
Almost certainly not. The CSAW randomised trial (Beard et al., The Lancet, 2018) found subacromial decompression surgery no better than sham surgery. International guidance now firmly recommends exercise-based care first — surgery is a last resort for the small minority who genuinely fail it.
How long will it take to get better?
Most people improve meaningfully within 6–12 weeks of a structured programme, with continued gains for months after. Flare-ups along the way are normal and managed by adjusting load, not abandoning the plan.
What exercises actually help?
Progressive strengthening of the rotator cuff and shoulder-blade muscles, movement retraining, and graded return to overhead positions — dosed to your irritability level. Generic shoulder circles won’t do it; specific, progressed loading will.
Can I keep swimming / playing badminton / lifting?
Usually, with temporary modification — reduced overhead volume, technique adjustments, and substitutions for the most provocative movements while capacity is rebuilt. Complete rest usually makes shoulders worse.
What about injections?
A single corticosteroid injection can settle a severely irritable shoulder enough to start rehab, but by itself changes nothing long-term. We use that window — when needed at all — to load the shoulder properly.
How does ACTYMED treat it differently?
We assess the whole chain — neck, upper back, shoulder blade, cuff — not just the pinch point. Treatment combines the guideline-endorsed exercise core with dry needling for the irritable muscles, manual therapy for the stiff segments, taping for immediate relief in sport, and warm Ayurvedic therapy when stiffness dominates.