# Function-Based Diagnosis and Physiotherapeutic Intervention for Shoulder Pain and Scapulothoracic Movement Control Deficits in Volleyball Players: A Case Report

**Authors:** Samiya Khan, Kalpana Zutshi, Aafreen LNU, Ashfaque Khan, Abdur Raheem Khan

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.78952 · Cureus · 2025-02-13

## TL;DR

A volleyball player's shoulder pain was treated through targeted physiotherapy focusing on scapular movement, showing the importance of functional diagnosis in sports rehabilitation.

## Contribution

This case report introduces a function-based physiotherapy approach for volleyball players with shoulder pain and scapulothoracic movement deficits.

## Key findings

- A six-week physiotherapy intervention improved shoulder pain and scapulothoracic movement control in a volleyball player.
- Scapular function plays a crucial role in shoulder joint mobility and stability for overhead athletes.
- Function-based diagnosis helps tailor rehabilitation to sport-specific performance needs.

## Abstract

Overhead athletes require complete, unrestricted arm movements to perform their peak-level sports. As a result, the shoulders must maintain a careful balance between mobility and stability. Volleyball players frequently experience shoulder pain and mobility limitations due to the repetitive overhead motions involved in spiking and serving, which place significant strain on the shoulder joint. This case report examines the functional diagnosis and physiotherapeutic intervention for a 26-year-old male volleyball player suffering from right shoulder pain and limited mobility during overhead activities. The assessment revealed deficiencies in scapulothoracic movement, highlighting the crucial role of the scapular function in shoulder joint mobility. Physiotherapeutic intervention, which focused on restoring scapular function through a six-week conservative physiotherapy intervention, successfully relieved symptoms of shoulder pain and scapulothoracic movement control deficits. These findings underscore the importance of addressing scapular movement in a comprehensive shoulder rehabilitation program, especially for athletes with specialized shoulder requirements, such as volleyball players. The repetitive overhead motions involved in volleyball can lead to a high incidence of shoulder pain and scapulothoracic movement control deficits due to its multifactorial etiology. Function-based diagnosis and physiotherapeutic intervention in athletes emphasize the impact of the condition on sport-specific performance, involving a comprehensive evaluation of biomechanics, range of motion, strength, and scapular mobility and stability. This case study provides valuable insights to guide personalized, movement-based rehabilitation programs for overhead athletes, contributing to the growing body of literature on functional diagnosis and targeted interventions for shoulder disorders in sports persons.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Scapulothoracic Movement Control Deficits (MESH:D007174), shoulder disorders (MESH:D000070599), mobility limitations (MESH:D051346), deficiencies in scapulothoracic movement (MESH:D009069), Shoulder Pain (MESH:D020069)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

9 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11910189/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11910189