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AC Joint Arthritis

AC joint arthritis is a common cause of pain at the top of the shoulder, especially in adults who use the shoulder repeatedly for lifting, pushing, overhead work, or gym activity. The AC joint, or acromioclavicular joint, is the small joint where the collarbone meets the top part of the shoulder blade. Even though it is a small joint, it can produce very noticeable pain when it becomes worn, inflamed, or irritated. [1][2]

In my practice, I often see Bangladeshi patients who point with one finger directly to the top of the shoulder and say, “Pain is exactly here.” That description often raises suspicion for AC joint pathology. Many patients feel pain during cross-body movement, pushing up from a chair, lifting weight overhead, doing push-ups, or sleeping on the affected side. [2][3]

I usually explain to my patients that AC joint arthritis is different from arthritis in the main ball-and-socket shoulder joint. Because the location is smaller and more specific, the symptoms can also be more localized. But it can still interfere with daily life, work, exercise, prayer positions, dressing, and sleep.

What Is AC Joint Arthritis?

AC joint arthritis means degeneration or inflammation affecting the acromioclavicular joint. The most common type is osteoarthritis, where the cartilage in the joint gradually wears down over time. In some patients, it develops as part of aging and repeated use. In others, it may follow previous injury, heavy lifting, post-traumatic changes, or long-term mechanical stress. [2][4]

As the cartilage becomes damaged, the joint surfaces may become irritated and painful. Small bony overgrowths can also develop, and these may contribute to pain or impingement symptoms in some patients. [3][4]

Where Is the AC Joint?

The AC joint is located at the outer end of the collarbone, where it meets the acromion of the shoulder blade. It sits at the top of the shoulder and helps coordinate shoulder motion when you lift or move your arm.

Why this small joint matters

Although the AC joint is small, it takes stress during:

  • Overhead reaching
  • Cross-body movement
  • Pushing and pressing
  • Carrying loads
  • Weight training
  • Repetitive upper-limb work

That is why even a small arthritic joint in this area can cause significant discomfort.

What Causes AC Joint Arthritis?

When I evaluate patients with top-of-shoulder pain, I look at both wear-and-tear changes and the person’s activity pattern.

Common causes and contributing factors

  • Age-related degenerative wear
  • Repeated overhead activity
  • Weight lifting, especially pressing movements
  • Heavy manual work
  • Previous AC joint injury or separation
  • Post-traumatic arthritis
  • Repetitive joint stress over time [2][3][4]

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is that AC joint arthritis can happen even without a single major injury. In some people, it builds up gradually from repeated use, shoulder loading, and age-related joint changes.

Who Is More Likely to Develop It?

AC joint arthritis can affect many types of patients, but it is commonly seen in:

  • Middle-aged and older adults
  • People who do repeated overhead work
  • Gym users doing bench press, shoulder press, dips, or heavy chest training
  • Laborers and workers who lift or carry regularly
  • Patients with previous AC joint sprain or shoulder trauma

In Dhaka and across Bangladesh, I also see this in homemakers doing repeated household lifting, office workers with long-standing shoulder strain, and active adults who continue exercise despite chronic shoulder pain.

Symptoms of AC Joint Arthritis

The symptoms are often quite characteristic when the AC joint is the real pain generator.

Common symptoms

  • Pain on the top of the shoulder [2][3]
  • Local tenderness directly over the AC joint
  • Pain when reaching across the body
  • Pain during overhead lifting
  • Pain during push-ups, bench press, or pushing up from bed or a chair
  • Discomfort when carrying a bag on the affected side
  • Night pain, especially when lying on that shoulder
  • Clicking or painful joint motion in some patients

Some patients say the shoulder feels fine at rest but becomes sharply painful when they bring the arm across the chest. That pattern is often clinically helpful.

How Is AC Joint Arthritis Different From Other Shoulder Problems?

Top-of-shoulder pain is not always AC joint arthritis, so proper evaluation matters.

Conditions that can mimic or accompany it

  • Rotator cuff disease
  • Subacromial bursitis
  • Biceps tendinitis
  • Frozen shoulder
  • AC joint injury or instability
  • Referred pain from the neck
  • Glenohumeral shoulder arthritis

In my practice, I often explain that shoulder MRI findings can be confusing because many patients have more than one abnormality. The important question is not only what appears on the scan, but which structure is actually causing the pain.

How I Diagnose AC Joint Arthritis

Diagnosis starts with a careful history and shoulder examination.

Clinical evaluation

I usually assess:

  • The exact location of pain
  • Tenderness over the AC joint
  • Pain with cross-body adduction
  • Pain during overhead or pressing movement
  • Rotator cuff strength
  • Shoulder range of motion
  • Signs of instability or other associated pathology

When a patient points with one finger directly over the top of the shoulder and that area is tender, AC joint involvement becomes more likely. [2][3]

Imaging

Imaging may include:

  • X-rays to look for joint-space narrowing, spurs, or degenerative change
  • MRI if symptoms are complex or if associated rotator cuff or other pathology is suspected
  • Ultrasound in selected settings

It is important to remember that X-ray or MRI changes alone do not confirm that the AC joint is the source of pain. Imaging must match the symptoms and examination findings. [3][5]

Diagnostic injection

Shoulder Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

In selected patients, a local anesthetic injection into the AC joint may help confirm whether the joint is truly the source of pain. This can be helpful when there are multiple possible pain generators in the shoulder. [3][5]

Non-Surgical Treatment for AC Joint Arthritis

The good news is that many patients improve without surgery, especially when the diagnosis is clear and the aggravating activities are addressed properly.

1. Activity modification

I often recommend reducing movements that repeatedly provoke AC joint pain. These may include:

  • Heavy overhead lifting
  • Deep bench press
  • Dips
  • Repeated push-ups
  • Cross-body loading

This does not mean the shoulder should be completely unused. The goal is to reduce joint irritation while maintaining safe movement.

2. Pain relief measures

Depending on the patient, short-term pain control may include:

  • Ice after aggravating activities
  • Doctor-guided use of pain-relieving medicine
  • Anti-inflammatory medicine when appropriate and safe

Patients with ulcer disease, kidney disease, heart disease, blood thinner use, or other medical problems should not take such medicines casually without proper advice.

3. Physiotherapy

Physiotherapy can be helpful, especially when there is associated rotator cuff weakness, scapular dyskinesia, posture-related overload, or poor shoulder mechanics.

Therapy may focus on

  • Shoulder mechanics
  • Scapular control
  • Rotator cuff strengthening
  • Posture correction
  • Gradual return to tolerated activity

In Bangladesh, many patients stop exercises as soon as the pain improves a little, then the problem returns. A structured program usually works better than occasional self-treatment.

4. AC joint injection

In selected patients, a corticosteroid injection into the AC joint may reduce inflammation and help confirm the pain source. However, injections should be used thoughtfully and not as an endless cycle of temporary relief. [3][5]

When Does Surgery Become an Option?

Surgery is not the first treatment for most patients with AC joint arthritis. I usually consider surgery only when:

  • Pain remains significant despite appropriate non-surgical treatment
  • Symptoms are clearly localized to the AC joint
  • Daily life, work, or exercise is limited
  • Imaging and examination support AC joint pathology
  • Other major pain sources have been assessed

Common surgical concept

The most common operation for persistent isolated AC joint arthritis is distal clavicle excision or distal clavicle resection, sometimes called the Mumford procedure. The painful end of the clavicle is trimmed to reduce painful bone-on-bone contact at the AC joint. This may be done through open or arthroscopic techniques in appropriate patients. [3][6][7]

I usually explain to my patients that surgery aims to reduce the painful contact in the joint, but surgery should only be chosen after we are reasonably confident that the AC joint is truly the source of symptoms.

Recovery After AC Joint Surgery

Recovery varies depending on the patient, the exact procedure, associated shoulder conditions, and rehabilitation quality.

Recovery usually includes

  • Early protection of the shoulder
  • Pain control
  • Gradual range-of-motion recovery
  • Progressive strengthening
  • Stepwise return to lifting and sports

For Bangladeshi patients, the practical recovery issues often include travel, crowded transport, sleeping comfort, dressing, bathing, office work, and temporary limitations in household tasks. Families should understand that even a small-joint surgery can still require disciplined rehabilitation.

What Happens If AC Joint Arthritis Is Ignored?

Not every case becomes severe, but persistent symptoms may continue to cause:

  • Ongoing pain with work or exercise
  • Reduced gym tolerance
  • Difficulty lifting overhead
  • Sleep disturbance
  • Recurrent flare-ups
  • Loss of confidence in shoulder use

In some patients, the condition stays manageable with lifestyle modification. In others, repeated aggravation keeps the joint inflamed and painful. That is why a correct diagnosis matters.

When Should You Seek Urgent Medical Attention?

AC joint arthritis itself is usually not an emergency, but urgent evaluation is important if:

  • Pain began after major trauma
  • There is visible deformity after injury
  • The arm cannot be lifted
  • There is major weakness or numbness
  • There is fever, redness, or warmth suggesting infection
  • There is rapidly worsening swelling

These features may point to a different or more serious problem than simple arthritis.

Daily-Life Advice I Give to Patients in Bangladesh

Practical tips

  • Avoid repeated painful pressing exercises during flare-ups
  • Do not force through sharp top-of-shoulder pain in the gym
  • Use better lifting technique and reduce excessive load
  • Modify household tasks that keep the shoulder aggravated
  • Pay attention to posture and scapular control
  • Seek proper assessment if pain keeps returning

Many patients in Dhaka try to manage top-of-shoulder pain with only rest, massage, or painkillers. Sometimes that helps temporarily, but persistent symptoms deserve a proper orthopedic examination so the actual pain source is not missed.

Related Topics

References

  1. MedlinePlus. Shoulder Injuries and Disorders. Available at: https://medlineplus.gov/shoulderinjuriesanddisorders.html
  2. Johns Hopkins Medicine. AC Joint Problems. Available at: https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/ac-joint-problems
  3. Mazzocca AD, Arciero RA, Bicos J. Degenerative joint disease of the acromioclavicular joint: a review. Available at: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23649008/
  4. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Osteoarthritis. Available at: https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/osteoarthritis
  5. Wang J, Ma JX, Zhu SW, Jia HB, Ma XL. Current evidence for nonpharmacological interventions and criteria for surgical management of persistent acromioclavicular joint osteoarthritis: A systematic review. Available at: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32269599/
  6. Pensak MJ, Grumet RC, Slabaugh MA, et al. Open versus arthroscopic distal clavicle resection. Available at: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20434670/
  7. Eskola A, Santavirta S, Viljakka HT. Limited distal clavicle excision of acromioclavicular joint osteoarthritis. Available at: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26969210/

FAQs BY PATIENTS

It usually causes pain on the top of the shoulder, often with tenderness at a very specific point. The pain often increases when you move the arm across the body, do pressing movements, lift overhead, or lie on that side. [2][3]

No. Frozen shoulder mainly causes stiffness and global movement restriction. AC joint arthritis usually causes more localized pain at the top of the shoulder, especially with certain movements, while overall motion may be less restricted unless another condition is also present.

Yes. Many patients improve with activity modification, physiotherapy, pain control, and selected injections. Surgery is usually considered only if symptoms remain significant despite appropriate non-surgical treatment. [3][5]

These activities load the AC joint and can compress the painful area, especially if the joint is already inflamed or worn. That is why gym-related symptoms are common in AC joint arthritis.

If surgery is needed, the most common option is distal clavicle excision, where a small part of the end of the collarbone is removed to reduce painful contact in the AC joint. [6][7]

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