Right now, let your arm hang at your side. Gently swing it in small circles — clockwise for 30 seconds, then counterclockwise for 30 seconds. That's a pendulum exercise. It's the safest starting point for a frozen shoulder, and it's what most rehab protocols begin with. Do it 3 times today.
Your shoulder joint has a sleeve around it — like a shirt sleeve around your arm. That sleeve has shrunk in the wash. It's physically too tight for the ball to roll properly in the socket. The pain isn't from damage — it's your body's alarm system reacting to tissue being stretched beyond its current (shrunken) limit. The good news: unlike a shirt, your body can gradually re-stretch that sleeve. But yanking on it makes it shrink tighter. Gentle, progressive loading is what loosens it.
Right now, let your arm hang loose. Gently swing it in small circles — 30 seconds clockwise, 30 seconds counterclockwise. That's a pendulum exercise, and it's the safest first move for a frozen shoulder.
Pendulum swings use gravity to gently mobilize the joint without provoking the inflamed capsule. Every evidence-based rehab protocol starts here.
Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.
The Verdict
Frozen shoulder heals itself in 1-2 years — but the right exercises cut months off that timeline.
Your shoulder joint has a sleeve around it — like a shirt sleeve around your arm. That sleeve has shrunk in the wash. It's physically too tight for the ball to roll properly in the socket. The pain isn't from damage — it's your body's alarm system reacting to tissue being stretched beyond its current limit. Unlike a shirt, your body can gradually re-stretch that sleeve. But yanking on it makes it shrink tighter. Gentle, progressive loading is what loosens it.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
UK FROST trial (n=503, Lancet 2020), multiple systematic reviews, APTA CPG
Injection suppresses inflammation inside the joint (most effective early). Structured PT maintains and restores movement while addressing motor control deficits.
Pain relief within 1-2 weeks of injection. Functional improvement over 6-12 weeks of PT.
Multiple RCTs (2022-2024), systematic reviews
Active loading addresses both the structural scarring and the muscle guarding component. Superior to passive stretching alone.
Measurable ROM gains within 4-8 weeks. Full benefit over 3-6 months.
UK FROST trial — equivalent outcomes, highest cost-effectiveness
For patients failing 3-6 months of conservative care. Forcibly disrupts adhesions. Highest probability of cost-effectiveness in the FROST trial.
Immediate ROM gain post-procedure. 6-12 weeks rehab after.
RCTs — 16% absolute risk difference for treatment success vs placebo
Best delivered in clinic where the therapist can immediately adjust based on tissue response. Less effective without concurrent pain management in the freezing phase.
Limited RCTs for frozen shoulder specifically. Extrapolated from rotator cuff literature
3 sets of 6-8 reps at submaximal to maximal tolerance. For late-stage restoration when ROM allows full movement.
2 min each direction | 3x daily
Lean forward, let your arm hang. Gently swing in small circles. Let gravity do the work.
Should be pain-free. Smaller circles if sore.
3 x 10 | Daily
Hold a stick with both hands at waist height. Use your good arm to push the stick sideways, rotating the stiff arm outward. Hold 5 seconds.
Gentle stretch at end-range OK. Stop if sharp.
3 x 10 | Daily
Face a wall. Walk your fingers up as high as you can, keeping elbow straight. Hold 5 seconds at top.
Mark your height and track progress weekly.
3 x 10 | Every other day
Hold a light weight (1kg). Use your other hand to rotate outward, then slowly lower back in over 4 seconds. The slow lowering is the key.
Moderate effort, no sharp pain.
3 x 10 | Daily
Sit tall. Squeeze shoulder blades together and slightly down. Hold 5 seconds.
Effort in mid-back, not shoulder pain.
Refer to: A&E for suspected fracture/dislocation/infection. GP for suspected malignancy. Orthopedics for refractory cases (no progress after 6 months conservative care).
The glenohumeral joint capsule — a thin tissue sleeve wrapping the ball-and-socket — becomes inflamed, then progressively scarred. The coracohumeral ligament and rotator interval thicken first, followed by the fold of capsule under the armpit (the axillary recess).
Important: some of the restriction is from muscle guarding — your muscles clamping down to protect the joint — not just structural scarring. This matters because active motor control training addresses the guarding component that passive stretching can't reach.
APTA/JOSPT CPG, 2013
Pain-free stretching and supervised neglect. Match intensity to irritability. Favor passive modalities.
Multiple RCTs, 2022-2024
Eccentric loading + scapular stabilization shows superior functional improvements compared to passive therapy.
Follow newer evidence. Active loading in the frozen/thawing phases. The guarding component responds to motor control training, not passive stretching. Pain-free stretching still appropriate in the highly irritable freezing phase.
General orthopedic consensus
12 weeks intensive supervised PT as the standard conservative pathway.
UK FROST Trial, Lancet 2020 (n=503)
Early structured PT showed no clinical superiority over MUA or arthroscopic release at 12 months.
PT is still the correct first line — same results, lowest risk, lowest cost. The self-limiting natural history normalizes outcomes across all pathways. But manage expectations: this is a marathon, not a sprint.
CPG Recency Check: The APTA/JOSPT 2013 CPG is older than the 5-year threshold. The 2020 FROST trial and 2022-2024 eccentric loading RCTs significantly update the evidence base.
The research: FROST trial used 12 supervised sessions over 12 weeks for optimal results.
The reality: Most healthcare systems cap at 6 sessions. Home exercise compliance in highly painful conditions is historically poor.
Adjustment: Front-load education in sessions 1-2. Teach 3-4 key exercises with clear pain-guided rules. Use virtual check-ins to maintain adherence.
The research: Natural history is 12-24 months, sometimes up to 3 years.
The reality: Patients expect resolution in weeks. Frustration drives premature surgical referral before the thawing phase has even started.
Adjustment: Set timeline expectations at first visit with concrete milestones. "Pain improves significantly by month 3. Stiffness improves from month 6. Full resolution 12-24 months."
The research: General population trials show favorable conservative outcomes.
The reality: Diabetics (10-20% of frozen shoulder patients) have worse prognosis, higher bilateral rates, and steroid injections complicate blood sugar control.
Adjustment: Expect longer timelines (up to 30 months). Coordinate injection timing with GP for blood sugar monitoring. Consider earlier MUA referral if conservative care stalls.
Surgery isn't wrong — it's just rarely necessary. The UK FROST trial (503 patients, the largest ever) showed physiotherapy, manipulation under anesthesia, and arthroscopic capsular release all converge to the same outcomes at 12 months. MUA was the most cost-effective. Surgery had the lowest rate of needing further treatment. But structured PT carries the lowest risk and cost while achieving the same results.
Diabetic patients need separate expectations. They make up 10-20% of frozen shoulder cases but have worse prognosis, higher bilateral rates, and steroid injections complicate blood sugar control for 24-48 hours. Expect timelines closer to 24-30 months, not the standard 12-24.
Not all stiffness is structural. Part of the movement loss comes from active muscle guarding — your muscles clamping down to protect the joint. This is why eccentric loading and scapular stabilization work better than passive stretching. They retrain the nervous system to allow movement, not just stretch scarred tissue.
The 2013 guideline is outdated. It's the most recent dedicated CPG for frozen shoulder, but the FROST trial (2020) and multiple eccentric loading RCTs (2022-2024) have significantly shifted the evidence. The old "supervised neglect" approach leaves too much on the table.
What would change this protocol: a large RCT (n>400) comparing early heavy eccentric training vs passive stretching in the freezing phase, with MRI-verified capsular changes, stratified by diabetic status. If aggressive loading in the acute phase prevented structural fibrosis, it would completely shift early treatment away from the cautious approach.
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.
Evidence-based treatment order for uncomplicated cases. Start at the top — most people don't need the bottom.
Red flags, progressive weakness, or bowel/bladder changes require immediate medical assessment and change this pathway.
Physio conditions reviewed against clinical evidence. What works, what doesn't, and what to do — from a practising physiotherapist.
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