Paddling pain

Discussion in 'Mid Atlantic' started by terra-firma intolerant, Aug 10, 2009.

  1. terra-firma intolerant

    terra-firma intolerant Well-Known Member

    740
    Jul 5, 2008
    I started feeling this pain or stitch or something in the said of my back close to where my left shoulder blade ends - probably the Dorsi muscle. I sorta feels like a muscle moves over a bone when I extend my arm up and forward when I paddle. It's not that bad, and I'm hoping that taking a break will heal it before the swell gets good.

    Just wondering if anyone else feels this. It's more of a muscle pain, not a joint, but it's comparable to like a ligament popping in and out of place.
     
  2. dredg2

    dredg2 Well-Known Member

    161
    Nov 3, 2007
    It could just be shoulder impingement or tendonitis, take advil and rest up. I have injured both shoulders and you'll hear cracking and feel some discomfort with motion at times, but it takes time to heal so best advice is to no put pressure on it too much and/or in the position where it might hurt.

    Keep taking advil to reduce the swelling and inflammtion of the joint or muscle--should be good to go in a couple weeks just unfortunately takes a while to heal.
     

  3. wbsurfer

    wbsurfer Well-Known Member

    Mar 30, 2008
    go to the gym and work out. as long as your shoulder isn't dislocating your ok. as its nothing like my knee as i gotta get some surgery on the knee one day. but take some advil and build up muscle thats what my physical therapist told me when i injured my knee but i had the good pain killers. also no more paddling over to mase.
     
  4. Chris Joyner

    Chris Joyner Moderator

    690
    May 23, 2006
    Aleeve works the best for me for that type of pain. I often get what is called tennis elbow when I travel abroad and am forced to surf good waves for weeks straight. :)
     
  5. terra-firma intolerant

    terra-firma intolerant Well-Known Member

    740
    Jul 5, 2008
    If any hurricanes do come in the next few weeks, Im going out for sure. I'm hoping that this current flat spell will last long enough for me to heal... plus I'm a kid, does that zoom up my recovery rate at all? :p
     
  6. terra-firma intolerant

    terra-firma intolerant Well-Known Member

    740
    Jul 5, 2008
    Ok, that's stupid. Just stupid. :p If anything is going to help me it's not "working out." I mean, yeah, do it when you are not hurting to build surrounding muscles, but not while you're injured. When you are rehabbing a seriously injured body art, it is mandatory to REBUILD that muscle, but what I have is more of strain, from doing one thing for too long, comparable to what every athlete gets, which they can only heal by resting, then after they rest, work out opposing muscles to balance out the muscle imbalances.
     
  7. wbsurfer

    wbsurfer Well-Known Member

    Mar 30, 2008
    i was just messing with you leddy about working out with the bad shoulder. but trully take a good pain killer and dont surf. but defiently stretch that area out when you do go surfing.
     
  8. MDSurfer

    MDSurfer Well-Known Member

    Dec 30, 2006
    So, a guy walks into a doctor's office and says. . .

    "Doc, it really hurts when I do THIS" at which point he raises his arm.

    The Doctor says, "Then don't do THAT."
     
  9. terra-firma intolerant

    terra-firma intolerant Well-Known Member

    740
    Jul 5, 2008
    I'll keep that in mind
     
  10. terra-firma intolerant

    terra-firma intolerant Well-Known Member

    740
    Jul 5, 2008
    Yeah, and looking at the forecast it looks like there won't be any waves till at least the end of this week :rolleyes:
     
  11. Don Ride

    Don Ride Well-Known Member

    73
    Apr 2, 2009
    Ice

    Ice it a few times a day. Ice is the most under rated treatment for these kinds of injurys/over use porblems.:)
     
  12. wbsurfer

    wbsurfer Well-Known Member

    Mar 30, 2008
    here what my orthopedic doctor says to do. ice it for 15 mins then take the ice off for about 30 mins or so. and ice it about 3 times a day.
     
  13. cjswee

    cjswee Well-Known Member

    94
    Aug 5, 2008
    Yep

    Ice is good....It will keep the swelling down and pressure from building and this helps from causing additional injury. Hit the gym lightly, if your too sore to work out do some stretching...get that lactic acid out of the muscle, take vitamin D, eat banana's, and drink water...Building the muscles up year round is key especially when you're over 30...
     
  14. terra-firma intolerant

    terra-firma intolerant Well-Known Member

    740
    Jul 5, 2008
    Dammit

    Crap, I was surfing today's fun waist-chest waves, and what do ya know, I started feeling popping again :mad:. Last two sessions I surfed (after a took a week-long break) I was fine.
    So what the heck! It doesn't really hurt, but I'm afraid I'll make it a lot worse by surfing all day tomorrow and sunday (maybe sat). It doesn't hurt, it's just annoying as hot crap.

    So when I got home today, I iced it, rubbed some traummeel stuff on it, drank some Hammer Recovery powder, and put a heat pack on it. I'm hoping it was just a temporary flare up (fat chance).

    Hmmmm.... Biggest swell in years OR let my muscle (or whatever the hell it is) fully heal.

    I'll take swell! The damn thing can heal during school!
     
  15. stoneybaloney

    stoneybaloney Well-Known Member

    May 11, 2009
    Could be tendonitis back there. My shoulder pops / cracks because of tendonitis. Just take some Advil before you go out and then some afterwards. Try stretching the area as much as you can before you go out too.
     
  16. terra-firma intolerant

    terra-firma intolerant Well-Known Member

    740
    Jul 5, 2008
    It wouldn't bother me so much but it seems the only way that you can stretch it, that's when it pops. it's not rotary cuff it's the shoulder blade in the side of my back.

    I can't really think of ways to stretch it and warm it up.

    I know, before I go out I jog half a mile and do 100 jumping jacks (seriously).
     
  17. dmt3y

    dmt3y New Member

    2
    Aug 18, 2009
    I have tendinitis in both shoulders. Sometimes when I paddle it sounds like rice crispy treats. I take 800mg of any non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug. Either advil or motrin is fine. Just make sure it reads "NSAID" on the bottle. Other than that, you're just dealing with pain. I wouldn't take aleve (naproxin) and definitely don't take Tylenol.

    When my shoulders get really bad, I take a week off all exercise, take 800mg of NSAIDs every 6 hours and ice my shoulders. It's normally alright after a week or less. Good luck this weekend, dude. I moved to DC a little while ago and have no idea where to go. I saw the thread on OC and will head there on Sunday. Saturday looks to be WAY too big for my funboard:eek:
     
  18. terra-firma intolerant

    terra-firma intolerant Well-Known Member

    740
    Jul 5, 2008
    thanks man, I know I'll be surfing a lot friday and sunday, finding a good spot sat will be tricky if possible
     
  19. Curly

    Curly Member

    6
    Apr 11, 2008
    I competitively swam for 17 years, so I'm no stranger to the nagging shoulder pain. Aleve and other pain killers help, but if you're looking to go out and are not sure if your shoulder is healed or "O.K." I would suggest giving it a rigorous stretch before paddling out. I would also suggest before you head out into the break, take a few minutes to paddle near the shoreline, then stretch out again. Pre activity stretches are good, but they pale in comparison to stretches when the blood is blowing a bit.
     
  20. terra-firma intolerant

    terra-firma intolerant Well-Known Member

    740
    Jul 5, 2008
    I found a very good warm-up that really helps, I barely notice the feeling now. I'll post it once I don't feel lazy.