Edward Komberg

Chiropractor & Business Entrepreneur

Shoulder Pain and Rotator Cuff Basics: A Chiropractor’s Field Guide for LA

Shoulders love options and hate corners. Pain shows up when we lose rotation, load the wrong tissues, or spike volume (hello, weekend painting project or surprise pull-up challenge). Here’s a simple framework I use in clinic: regain motion, reinforce the cuff and scapula, then reload overhead work without poking the bear.

Quick Screen (At Home)

  • Reach behind head: Compare sides; note pulling vs. sharp pain.
  • Reach behind back: Thumb height difference? Pinch in the front?
  • Wall slide: Can you raise arms without shrugging early?

Motion First

  • Thoracic Extension over Foam/Chair: 8–10 reps.
  • Posterior Capsule Stretch (Cross-body): 20–30s, easy.
  • Pec Doorway Stretch: 2×30s each side.

Stability & Strength (Light to Start)

  • Scapular Clocks: Wall-based, move shoulder blade without shrug; 6–8 each direction.
  • External Rotation (band): Elbow tucked, 2×10.
  • Prone Y/T/W: 6–8 of each with quality over quantity.

Return to Overhead

  • Landmine Press: Friendly angle for grumpy shoulders.
  • Half-Kneeling Press: Core on; no rib flare.
  • Tempo Pull-Downs: Slow eccentrics teach control.

From Dr. Edward Komberg: “If the shoulder complains, check the spine and ribs first. Stiff thoracic segments make the cuff do jobs it never signed up for.”

When to Seek Imaging/Referral

Trauma with weakness, night pain that doesn’t ease, or progressive loss of motion warrants medical workup. Otherwise, conservative care plus graded loading helps most non-traumatic shoulder pain.

CTA: Need an overhead on-ramp? Book with Dr. Edward Komberg—we’ll free motion, tune the cuff, and reintroduce lifts that respect your tissues.


About the Author: 37 years in practice, three SoCal clinics, thousands of shoulder recoveries guided with a motion-first approach.

About the Author

Dr. Edward Komberg began in La Palma, CA and built three Southern California clinics over 37 years. He’s treated more than 500,000 patient visits, staying focused on calm, effective, patient-first care.