referral criteria from primary care - shoulder pain
Last reviewed 04/2022
The patient should be referred to an orthopaedic specialist if there is
- pain
and significant disability lasting more than six months
- this is continuing pain and disability despite attention to occupation or sporting factors and, if appropriate, physiotherapy and steroid injections
- history of instability ("Has your shoulder ever partly or completely come out of joint?" "Are you worried that your shoulder might slip on certain movements?") or acute, severe post-traumatic acromioclavicular pain
- diagnostic uncertainty
- red
flag criteria e.g.
- history of cancer
- symptoms and signs of cancer
- unexplained deformity, mass, or swelling:? possible tumour
- red skin, fever, systemically unwell - suggestive of infection
- trauma, epileptic fit, electric shock; loss of rotation and normal shape - could the presentation represent an unreduced dislocation
- trauma, acute disabling pain and significant weakness, positive drop arm test - possible acute rotator cuff tear
- unexplained significant sensory or motor deficit:? neurological lesion > neurosurgical referral
- history of cancer
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