I had major surgery to my right shoulder for a SLAP tear, so there was a lot of re-attaching of muscles, tendons, and ligaments. Lots of pins/anchors. Anyway, my doctor told me that to have a successful surgery, the patient, PT, and surgeon all play an equal part. The PT is VERY important, so get a good one! And, do everything they tell you to do, and nothing you are not supposed to do!!!!!! The whole week after surgery, for me anyway, was sheer he_ _! I was in a lot of pain, very restricted, being attached to the "ice man" and having my arm velcroed to my waist. It was a week I hope to never go through again! But, I had a trip I wanted to take in two months, and went at the PT and home exercising very, VERY faithfully. And, with sheer determination and optimism, I signed off after two months! I still have to be careful, because if I overdo, it can hurt for a few days. I do not do my weekly arm exercises, as I should, for life!
My elder, bed-ridden mother had a shoulder replacement, but never really did her PT. She would pull down on a pully that she had hooked over a door, a couple of times a day, and that was it. She never regained shoulder strength/movement. She just moved her lower arm from the elbow. So sad! I cannot impress enough the importance of PT!!
I hope everything goes well, and just keep remembering (during that first week) that it gets a little better day by day.
Dawn,
In beautiful Northwest Montana