Recovering from a Type-V AC Separation Without Surgery
I’m writing about my experience with a type V/grade 5 AC shoulder separation to help other active people who have suffered the same, by detailing what it was like for me to recover without surgery. This is info I wished I’d had in the beginning.
Well, At Least I’ve Got A Good Story…
In late September, 2007, seven days before the end of a two-month mountain bike tour down the Great Divide Mountain Bike Route, I went over the handlebars in the middle of nowhere, New Mexico. I landed on my shoulder and felt an almost instant body-numbing pain and within minutes had a huge bulge growing on the top of my shoulder where the collar bone hooks into the shoulder joint. This was the most painful and severe injury I’ve ever had.
I went to the E.R. (quite an adventure in itself) and they took x-rays and determined the shoulder was dislocated and separated. They gave me pain medication of some sort (I can’t remember now) and set the shoulder back in its socket. They placed my arm in a sling and said they couldn’t do anything about the dislocation and that I should see an orthopedic surgeon within a week.
I saw an orthopedic surgeon in about three or four days and he had a new set of x-rays taken. He concluded that I had a Type-V AC separation that was reducible–meaning that the collar bone could be pushed back down to meet the shoulder joint (though it would pop back up when released), something not always possible with a Type-V. I got lucky, since surgery would be a must if it was not reducible. Upon further research, I’ve found that this kind of type-V separation is like a very severe type-III separation.
[Good illustrations & diagrams]
[A good explanation of the types of AC separations ]
My surgeon said that 90% of surgeons would recommend surgery, but a few on the cutting edge of shoulder work are now advising some (highly motivated) patients to see how successful they can be in rehabilitating the shoulder without surgery. I was highly motivated to see what I could do to rehab my shoulder without surgery. He said that surgery would be a possibility later if I could not get my shoulder to function the way I needed it to.
I had been able to bring back my right shoulder (the same one now separated) from a pretty severe rotator cuff tear with physical therapy alone five years previously. I have been a pretty consistent weight lifter since I was 19, doing things like pull ups, squats, bench press and other major lifts at a high intensity. I knew my body, and if it was possible at all, I felt like I could do it. My other motivation to do it on my own was that I had major-medical coverage only, and I’d end up paying for surgery mostly out of pocket. I also get incredibly queasy just thinking of being cut open, and the recovery from this kind of surgery would be long and painful.
0-4 Months: Rest & Rehab
The first week I felt pain all the time, sometimes so sharp and severe it made me wince. I kept my arm in the sling day and night, and took Percacet at night just to be able to sleep a little. I had to sit nearly upright, and even leaning back on the softest pillow hurt more than sitting up. I spent more of the night awake than asleep.
In the second week I started taking off the sling for a half-hour, once or twice a day and felt a huge sense of relief. My back and arm was cramping up from being in the sling. Late in the second week I was able to go for walks, but would have to tighten the sling to keep my arm held up. The movement of walking would cause pain, but overall I had to do it to keep the rest of my back and body from knotting and cramping up. I quit taking Percacet some time in the second week. My arm hung down at least an inch from my shoulder joint without the sling. I had no muscular ability to lift or move it back up into place, I could only push it up from under my elbow with my good arm. The end of my collar bone stuck up and was very sharp, causing tension on the skin. It was tremendously sensitive and the weight of a t-shirt made it sore, so by the end of the day the tip of the collar bone was very irritated.
In week three I started taking off the sling for most of the day and all night, though working on the computer for even short bits of time would make it ache with some shooting pains radiating out from the joint. I started doing simple range-of-motion stretches and movements, though the range was limited to the front and side and nothing overhead or to the back. I was able to walk 3-4 miles a day up around the mesa, still needing the sling for walking. About mid-week I added some jogging now and then during the walks, stabilizing my arm in its sling with my good hand. I always kept the sling very tight and snug to keep from damaging my shoulder.
At the end of week three I started doing very light resistance exercises using the cable machine on its lightest setting and using 1-3 lb. mini weights. I ran through exercises that I had done to rehab my rotator cuff – basically what I read when researching rehab was that anything that didn’t make it hurt worse was OK to do, and I had also discussed rehab dos and don’ts with my physical therapist that I worked with previously. I tried doing all the articulations possible using cable machines. Range of motion was very small, but what I could do I did.
Weeks 4-16 were all about making gains in range of motion using wall-walks and other stretching methods, plus weight resistance exercises three times a week. I continued running outside and spinning on the bike at the gym to keep fit. Range of motion was limited–I could lift my arm out to the side up to shoulder height, and out to the front about head height. I could not carry anything in my right hand that weighed more than 8-10 pounds because it would just hang down and hurt. There just wasn’t as much keeping my shoulder together, and letting my arm hang down without support for long periods of time really hurt. It was winter, and the cold made my shoulder ache down to the core, so I spent most of my time indoors and really enjoyed the hot sauna at the gym. During this time period I probably doubled the amount of weight on all rehab exercises, but at the end of 16 weeks I probably only had about 40-50% of my normal strength.
I would massage my shoulder with my good hand quite often. I would also roll around on a tennis ball while laying on the floor to get the knots out of the back of my shoulder – something my massage therapist had told me about. That helped tremendously. In fact, the knots would build up so quickly that I’d have to do it at least once a day sometimes or the pain from the knotted muscles would nearly bring me to tears. This is something I’d highly recommend, and something I still do sometimes still, 16 months out from the injury.
5-8 Months – Southeast Asia Bike Tour
I figured that by going to a warm climate and biking on the road would be a good choice for our next trip. I could spin on the bike at the gym for over an hour with no discomfort in my shoulder so I figured I was ready. Dave swapped out my handlebar stem for a shorter one so I’d be more upright and have less weight on my arms. We had a very loose schedule so that I could let my shoulder adjust slowly. So, we headed to Southeast Asia.
I was very happy with how it worked out. We cycled about four to five hours a day, and in the first two weeks I had some pretty good aches in my shoulder at the end of the day. But after about two weeks, it really adjusted and I had no problem at all. We spent some time on islands and along the coast so I had plenty of opportunities for swimming, which felt pretty good. I was even able to get open-water and advanced open-water certified for diving.
Even though I wasn’t doing any rehab exercises, my range of motion increased during this time. I think the ligaments and muscles needed time to rebuild. I continued to stretch and see progress throughout the tour. By the end, I could reach above my head and to the back, though I couldn’t touch my hands behind me.
9-11 Months – Paddling in Southeast Alaska
Dave and I paddled around Baranof Island, from Sitka to Sitka, with our friends Kris and Leslie. We had six weeks to make our way around, which was plenty of time for healthy people. Dave and I were in a tandem touring kayak, which was the only way that I could have made this trip at all, not just because of my shoulder, but also because I’d never kayaked before!
For the first three weeks or so I could paddle for a couple of hours with minimal pain, then aches and pains would start shooting from my shoulder and I’d have to take breaks (and let Dave paddle for both of us). After about three weeks, I had a good week where I could paddle a few hours and felt pretty strong. But then we had to wait eight days in Port Alexander for weather to calm enough to get around Cape Ommaney. Then we had to paddle hard for a couple of long days because there were few places we could land since much of that side was cliffs down to the water. This was too much for my shoulder, and for the rest of the trip back to Sitka I was in almost constant pain. It took just a week for my shoulder to feel solid again (to quit aching intermittently throughout the day). Then, just like that, it felt great again, though I wasn’t doing much with it.
12-15 Months – Back Home Doing Rehab
After we got back and settled, I got right into the gym, two to three times a week, to not only work my shoulder, but also do my regular lifting routine that I’ve enjoyed doing for many years before my injury. I started off fairly easy with the full rehab routine, but quickly found that my strength increase in all lifts. In addition, I noticed my flexibility was just about back to normal. I could interlock my fingers behind my back and straighten my arms and lift up. At the one-year mark, I estimated my strength was back to about 90%. Within a couple of weeks I could do two or three chin-ups and was really happy. After four months of solid training in the weight room, I think it’s back to 95%. I’ve even played some volleyball and felt great hitting and serving overhead. I’m incredibly happy to be at this point, and feel confident that I’ll be able to do nearly anything I want to physically in the future. But I want to stress that I think my personal success has to do with consistency and progressing very slowly with a long-term commitment to working my shoulder and keeping it healthy.
Day-to-Day: What it Feels Like
I’m happy to have my strength back, but my shoulder will never be the same. I still have a very weird-looking bump where my collar bone sticks up and my shoulder and arm still hang down lower than my other side. When I wear tank tops, sport tops or a swim suit, people notice that my shoulder looks weird and I can tell it bothers the sqeamish. I can now make it look much less obvious when I focus and pull my shoulder up and back with my muscles. But it’s something that definitely shows when I move around naturally and when I’m not thinking about it.
My shoulder also feels tight and unnatural when I simply hold my shoulders back, or even when I’m sitting or walking. I’ll notice and feel it randomly, and it’s not that big of a deal, just annoying at times. I try to stretch and hold good posture when I think about it so that I don’t start to look hunched forward in that side.
Another nagging thing is that my right shoulder is more prone to knotted muscles from neck to around the shoulder blade in the back. I also sometimes still have small aches in my shoulder, usually in the evening on days I’ve worked it hard in the gym. I can live with these things.
If you’ve suffered a severe AC separation and still have questions after reading this, please feel free to email me. I’m no expert, but I can let you know what my own experience has been like. This in no way should substitute for seeing a physician or physical therapist.
Resources:
Rehab Exercises for AC Separations from sportsinjuryclinic.net
Shoulder Articulations from ExRx.net
Shoulder Separation Rehabilitation from University of Pittsburg Medical Center
69 comments Post Categories: In-between Trips
Have a Type-III rt. shoulder separation, broken left hand, and fractured rib from cycling fall 3 weeks ago. At this time, following Drs. suggestion to attempt rehab first – till left hand is healed. I need one usable hand! I’m 65YOA and have biked 10 – 40 miles almost daily the past 30+ years, skied 100+ days/yr, and am now using ellipitcal to maintain cardio. I eat a high protein diet and take an aspirin daily after aortic valve replacement 2 years ago. ( That pain and recovery was easier than this so far!)I’d like any info. on any vitamin supplements that might help to recover.
Just got my right arm out the sling today. Xrays showed right ac reduction and twin tail still holding up and looking good. I just have a stiff arm with loss of range of motion as well as loss of strength. Have been super conservative since surgery and havent done anything stupid. All advice to others in similar situation: take it slow.
Type 5 right ac separation more than 2 months post op. 95% range of motion back. Muscle memory coming back. Still weak but coming on strong day by day. Can do assisted push ups and highly assisted chin ups. Definetely go with the surgical route (for me anyway.) I believe you have to be patient, take it slow and have had some sort of fitness before injury or become health and fitness minded after. You need a good Physical Therapist. You need to be highly motivated and have self control (to not start deadlifting or do something stupid right off the bat.) You also need the right surgeon. Twin tail by arthrex rocks.
Post OP, 2 years 8 month from surgery for Type 5 AC seperation. 85% range of motion returned 85% strenght. Still can’t throw a ball properly. Gets sore on rainy days. Clicking of joints still present. Shoulder never felt right after the surgery. My outlook isn’t very optimistic about it getting to a completely comfortable position.
100% ROM back. Strength at about 75%. Doesn’t feel like old shoulder or arm but improviing at am impressive rate. i am back in the gym doing crossfit at lesser weight and speed. Definetely farther along than imagined. I am now able to do 20 push-ups 9at a time) and chin-ups (15) with a less assisted band. I am lifting the 45lb bar over my head. The more I stretch and work-out the less my arm is stiff and sore at nite and upon waking. Basically my pec minor and serratus muscles as well as some of the rotator cuff structures were a bit retracted and have to be continually stretched to original length. Also the more I strengthen my rotator cuff, pec (minor) and seratus muscles with tubing the better my overall condition becomes. I can throw a baseball to my son with no problem, although it isnt at the highest orginal speed. Conduct tubng drills and let your physical therapist stretch and work you with dedication on your part. Lotion is the motion then strength. Get and stay motivated.
I never mentioned my dabbling with dry-needling. My PT dry-needled the heck out of me as well as the usual therapies. It is like accupuncture. I believe this helped distibute alot of the “healing juies” that were in my shoulder pre and post-op. This went on for the 30 days after surgery , but before Physical Therapy. When I started actual PT he performed it only a few times then we phased it out. During the first month he letme take some needles home. I had my wife perform this daily or when I didnt ake the drive to see him. The thinking behind the process is sound. Create micro trauma around the ac joint and the existing “healing juices” already available can shunt to the ac or other surrounding structures also in need of healing. My 2 cents. Good Luck to you all.
By “Twin Tail” are you referring to the looped suture technique? Who was your Doctor and how soon after the injury did you have the surgery?
I don’t think so. Dr was an Army Dr. Located at FT. Benning, Ga.
Cheers Michelle, it’s only been 3.5 months after my AC Separation, and after a few reasonably short paddles, am staggered at how much pain I am in and how much of a friend an ice pack is :D. Admittedly, unrealistically I had expected to be back into paddling fairly quickly, so it was extremely helpful to read your article. Thanks again
So… I went for the surgery.
The actual experience of surgery is, without a doubt, the worst thing I’ve been through. Really tore up my throat with the breathing tube, came out of hospital and promptly caught a virus, couldn’t get comfortable for a moment for three whole days.
I got through all that and I’m now 12 days post-op. I’m off the drugs, though the pain is very present every morning and throughout the day depending on what I’m doing.
Follow up treatment has been rather poor. I need to wait a further nine days before I can see the consultant again. That will make it three weeks between operating and appointment. I really want an assessment of movement and a verdict on whether or ot this sling is still an essential… I hate wearing it!
There’s no doubt that the pain of the operation is worse than the accident. But when bones are cut and drilled; muscles are scraped of scar tisue; and ligaments are re-sewn I s’pose I’m not surprised. The incision is around 7-inches long as the injury was so severe and required an open surgery approach… none of this keyhole business.
Where I’ll get to next I’m not sure. I’m half happy, half sad that it’s been done. I anticipate hitting a wall of depression in the coming month, but it’ll pass.
Fingers crossed I’ll be at 100% come August this year…
Just over five weeks after the surgey. Been out of the sling since week four.
As much as it’s great to get the arm out and in use, it’s slow going. It aches all of the time around the shoulder, irrelevant of what I’m doing.
Range is the first thing I need to improve. As much as the vertical motions have improved significantly day by day, the horizontal/rotational movement (rotator cuff) is still poor, limited and hurts a lot. The arm, at present, is totally unable to go into certain positions which is a disabling feeling.
I’m able to do many normal tasks and even a bit of weight isn’t of much consequence now though. I’m always worried I’m going to ‘do something’ to the arm, but I really want to get used to using it properly again.
I just hope this perpetual aching sensation will go away and won’t be a permanent feature as a result of this operation…
If you’re thinking of having surgery: be prepared. It’s very long and drawn-out (and this is just so far!). You’ll need lots of time off work and patience. The recovery from the injury itself was far, far quicker – the operation is more significant due to bone and muscle both getting cut through.
Update when things get better/worse…
I have a Level III AC separation incurred when I fell 7/9 on the job as head AC commercial technician. Surgeon says I can go either way – surgery using cadaver ham string or no surgery. I need to get back full use of my arm in my job and have pretty well decided to have surgery, but after reading many posts am having trouble deciding! How are you doing now that more time has gone by?
Right AC as good as ever. I am impressed by orthopedics technology. I have a bit of deficiency in strength but thats because I have not pushed myself but have listened to my strength coach and PT with starting rock bottom. I can do everything I did before but with lesser weight as if I were a beginner athlete. But my strength improves by the month.
Its good to be able to read so many cases in one site. Thanks for that!
Its February 13 2013 and im 12 days into a type 5 AC seperation. I was told that surgery was the only option since my shoulder layed several inches bellow my clavical. I have a 5″ scar that is healing wonderfully and a steel plate with pins and a hook that attaches the acromion(top of shoulder blade)to the clavicle (collar bone). The first 3-4 days were very painfull and percocets gave relief however i had difficulty sleeping. I did manage to find the right position to sleep. The pain is subsiding daily and for a few days now I have taken my arm out of the sling to shower and to put on t shirts. I no longer require pain killers during the day – only 1-2 percs at night to help me sleep. I see the ortho surgen today and hope to hear some good news. The plate is to remain for 6 months and then to be removed according to my young 32YO DR. whom is up to speed with modern AC medicine. Good luck to all will this very painful injury!!!!
Hi there, Michelle. You have been on my mind a lot over the past two years, I lost this link to your blog and it mysteriously re-appeared just now as I was clearing out the cache on my Chrome browser. My name is John Riedler, and, on August 17, 2011, I fractured my pelvis in three places, suffered a concussion and had a right type three shoulder separation, sustained in a mountain biking accident while riding alone at sunset in a state park.
Almost two years have passed. My pelvis healed quickly and is as strong as ever. Just seven months after my mountain bike injury, March 17, 2012, I ran the 8K in the Virginia Beach Shamrock marathon with 8,400 other runners and finished 4th in my age group and 296th overall. I cried with happiness. But, as you know, my shoulder was far from healed.
I continued to train and work in physical therapy every day until about four months ago. I became very strong with a solid core and good endurance, but I kept spraining that weak shoulder. You know how painful that is. It tires out and becomes sore so easily. One day about five or six weeks ago the nighttime pain and general discomfort let up. I could act more naturally without guarding my right side anymore. It still gets tired and aches by the end of the day, but I do not think about being so careful not to re-injure myself like I used to.
You do not know how important you have been to me. This blog gave me a place to say things that only those of us who have experienced the devastation of a severe shoulder injury could know about. Even when I lost your link, I did not lose you, I never felt alone. My wife has been supportive to the max through all of this, but she could never understand what it is like to lay in bed trying to find comfort from the pain so sleep would be possible.
Or, realize how an elite level athlete could become so vulnerable and in need of help and support like a sick child, one who never wanted to lose his physical abilities–and it happened so fast.
Now I can run in any of the mid atlantic regional 5K, 8K, or 10K races and win my age group, no problem. The injury made me stronger in many respects, but my shoulder will never be like it was before the accident. I am strong and can bench press 120 pounds, cut down tree branches and the like, but I am a different person now.
I am a better person because I recognize the suffering in other people who have been stricken either by an accident like me, or with an illness, people who are trying to recover with all of their strength, all of their ability, in an attempt to regain the wellness and the effortlessness of being in action that we all took for granted without knowing what it would be like to lose it.
You lost it before I did, but you found a way to come back, and then you shared that hope, that determination in this blog and I am grateful to you for standing guard on the edge at a time when I really needed someone to hold out hope for me. You are a blessing to me and I am working at becoming better able to pass on that spirit whenever I meet another person who needs to let someone know how hard life can be, how unforgiving in the face of some slight miscalculation, how reckless we are shown to be for not taking exquisite care of the only body each of us has.
Now I have found you again and can say these things to you, not just wish for all this time that I had written down the website during the peak of my physical pain, I did save it, I really have been all right all along. Today, I get to say, Thank You! Thanks, Michelle. It is an honor to know your spirit.
I have had a mountain biking accident right in the end of July. They diagnosed Rockwood 5 for me and suggested to have surgery. I had the operation two days after the injury in Stuttgart, Germany. They have put the twin tail tightrope in my left shoulder. My shoulder hurt like hell right after the injury and after the operation too, but since 3 days after the operation I have not taken any painkillers. At the moment (2 weeks after OP) I have only minor or no pain and I can move my arm properly, just paying attention to move it in the allowed range. I will start the psyhio next week, 10 weeks long.
Sleeping is kinda hard, nowadays I only sleep on my back (never did that before) and I usually get up with back pain in the morning. The doc said this is because the unusual (for me) sleeping position. What is really surprising for me is that I was only required to wear the sling for 5 days after the OP. Everybody says that he/she had to wear it for weeks.
I am 24 years old and I do (did) a lot of sports (5-6 times a week; running, cycling, gym).
I would really like to talk with somebody who had the same injury and decided to have the OP. Please contact me at szabta89 AT gmail DOT com.
HeyHey! Its 17NOv2014. A little over two years since my AC type 5 separation. I have deployed several times. I do hard core Cross Fit. I do everything that I did before. The key is PT as soon as possible after surgery and dedication to rehab. I did some dry needling and lots of internal and external scar stretching. You def don’t want any contractures afterwards. This will become permanent if left alone. I am very impressed with the work the OrthoPod did. You can read past logs but he placed a fiber wire that is connected to my distal clavicle and the coracoid process!
Don’t let yourself be down with this injury. There is plenty of hope! Praise God!
I am on my way to another deployment and just finished a knarly CrossFit workout tonight. I have a scar to show. But chicks dig scars!