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SLAP Tear: Symptoms, Diagnosis, and Treatment in Dhaka, Bangladesh

A SLAP tear is a specific type of shoulder labrum injury. The term SLAP stands for superior labrum anterior to posterior. In simple language, it means a tear in the top part of the ring of tissue around the shoulder socket, often near the attachment of the biceps tendon.

In my practice, I often see patients who describe a deep shoulder pain that is difficult to point to with one finger. Some say the shoulder clicks, catches, or feels weak when lifting the arm overhead. Others notice the problem after a fall, a sudden pull, gym training, cricket, badminton, swimming, or repeated overhead work. For Bangladeshi patients, especially those living in Dhaka and balancing work, traffic, family duties, and limited time for rehabilitation, it is important to understand that not every shoulder pain is a simple muscle strain.

What Is a SLAP Tear?

The shoulder is a ball-and-socket joint. The socket is relatively shallow, so the body uses soft tissue for extra stability. One of these structures is the labrum, a ring of cartilage-like tissue around the socket. The labrum helps deepen the socket and supports shoulder stability.

In a SLAP tear, the upper part of the labrum is injured. This is also where the long head of the biceps tendon attaches. Because of that connection, patients may feel pain not only during shoulder movement but also with lifting, pulling, throwing, pushing, or carrying.

I usually explain to my patients that a SLAP tear is not the same as every other labral injury. A Bankart tear is more related to the front lower part of the labrum and shoulder instability after dislocation. A SLAP tear involves the top of the labrum and may present more with deep pain, clicking, and difficulty with overhead use.

How a SLAP Tear Happens

Sudden injury

A SLAP tear can happen after:

  • a fall on an outstretched hand
  • a road traffic accident
  • sudden forceful pulling of the arm
  • lifting a heavy object awkwardly
  • shoulder dislocation

In Dhaka, I also see shoulder injuries after slipping on stairs, motorcycle incidents, manual work, and sudden jerking injuries during transport or crowded daily activity.

Repetitive overhead use

Some patients do not recall one clear accident. Instead, the tear may develop gradually from repeated overhead stress. This can happen in:

  • cricket players
  • badminton players
  • swimmers
  • gym users doing overhead pressing or pulling
  • painters, electricians, and workers with repeated overhead tasks

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is that shoulder pain from repeated activity may start mildly and then become persistent. If the shoulder keeps clicking, weakens, or stops tolerating overhead use, it deserves proper assessment.

Common Symptoms of a SLAP Tear

The symptoms are not always dramatic. In fact, SLAP tears can be confusing because they may look like other shoulder problems.

Symptoms I commonly hear from patients

  • deep shoulder pain
  • pain when lifting the arm overhead
  • clicking, popping, or catching
  • a feeling of weakness
  • pain with throwing or forceful pulling
  • discomfort when carrying weight
  • reduced sports performance
  • a “dead arm” feeling during overhead activity

Some patients also have night discomfort or pain when turning in bed onto the affected side. Others mainly complain that the shoulder no longer feels reliable for work, sports, or exercise.

When a SLAP Tear May Be Mistaken for Something Else

When I evaluate patients with this problem, I do not assume every MRI report or every clicking shoulder is a SLAP tear that needs surgery. Shoulder pain can also come from:

  • rotator cuff problems
  • biceps tendon irritation
  • frozen shoulder
  • AC joint problems
  • scapular dyskinesia
  • neck-related pain
  • generalized shoulder instability

This is why the history and physical examination matter so much. Imaging alone does not tell the full story. Some labral changes may be present on scans, especially with age, without being the main cause of symptoms.

How I Evaluate a Suspected SLAP Tear

Medical history

I first want to understand:

  • whether the pain started after trauma or overuse
  • whether there is clicking, catching, or instability
  • which activities make it worse
  • whether there is weakness, numbness, or neck pain
  • whether the patient plays sports or performs overhead work

For Bangladeshi patients, the daily context matters. A college student, office worker, homemaker, manual laborer, and recreational athlete do not stress the shoulder in the same way. Treatment should match real-life demands.

Physical examination

During examination, I look at:

  • range of motion
  • strength
  • shoulder stability
  • pain location
  • scapular control
  • biceps-related signs
  • possible associated rotator cuff injury

No single test is perfect for diagnosing a SLAP tear. Usually, I combine the patient history, examination findings, and imaging when needed.

Imaging

Shoulder Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

An X-ray may be useful first to look for fracture, dislocation-related changes, arthritis, or other bone problems. If a labral injury is strongly suspected, MRI can help evaluate the soft tissue. In selected cases, an MR arthrogram may show the labrum more clearly.

I recommend scans thoughtfully, not casually. The goal is not to collect reports. The goal is to clarify whether the findings actually explain the patient’s symptoms and whether they will change management.

Treatment for a SLAP Tear

Non-surgical treatment

Many patients improve without surgery, especially if the tear is not causing major instability and the shoulder can recover with guided rehabilitation.

Non-surgical treatment may include:

  • temporary activity modification
  • ice in the early painful stage
  • pain-relieving or anti-inflammatory medicine when appropriate
  • structured physiotherapy
  • gradual return to movement and strengthening

Physiotherapy is very important. I usually explain to my patients that rehabilitation is not just about “doing some exercises.” A good program works on shoulder mechanics, scapular control, rotator cuff strength, flexibility, and safe return to activity.

For many people in Bangladesh, the practical challenge is consistency. They start feeling a little better and quickly go back to heavy lifting, overhead work, or gym exercises. That can delay recovery.

When I become more cautious

I pay closer attention if the patient has:

  • persistent pain despite proper rehabilitation
  • recurrent mechanical catching
  • repeated instability
  • major limitation in work or sport
  • associated injuries on imaging

In these situations, continuing the same ineffective approach for months is usually not helpful.

When surgery may be considered

Surgery is not the first answer for every SLAP tear. However, it may be considered if:

  • symptoms remain significant after appropriate non-surgical care
  • the patient has ongoing functional limitation
  • there is a clearly symptomatic tear in a younger active patient
  • associated shoulder injuries are present
  • overhead athletic or work demands remain severely affected

Arthroscopic surgery is commonly used when an operation is needed. Depending on the age of the patient, the tear pattern, the condition of the biceps attachment, and associated problems, treatment may involve repair of the labrum, debridement, or a biceps-related procedure. The exact choice depends on the clinical picture, not just the title written on the scan report.

Recovery and Rehabilitation

Whether treatment is surgical or non-surgical, recovery takes patience. A painful shoulder often improves in stages, not overnight.

After non-surgical care

Patients usually return step by step:

  • pain control first
  • movement recovery next
  • strength and control after that
  • gradual return to sport, work, or gym activity last

After surgery

If surgery is needed, the arm is usually protected early, followed by supervised rehabilitation. The timeline varies. Return to desk work, household tasks, manual labor, driving, or overhead sports does not happen at the same speed for everyone.

In my practice, I remind patients that recovery is not measured only by pain relief. The shoulder should regain confidence, control, and function. Returning too early to cricket, badminton, weight training, or heavy work can prolong the problem.

When Urgent Evaluation Is Important

A SLAP tear itself is not usually a life-threatening emergency, but some shoulder injuries need prompt medical care. Please seek urgent evaluation if:

  • the shoulder looks deformed after an injury
  • the shoulder may be dislocated
  • there is severe pain after trauma
  • you cannot move the arm at all
  • the hand or arm becomes numb
  • the arm suddenly feels very weak
  • the hand becomes pale, cold, or bluish
  • there is fever, redness, and a hot swollen joint

These signs raise concern for dislocation, fracture, nerve injury, blood flow problems, or infection. These should not be managed at home without assessment.

Practical Advice for Patients in Dhaka and Bangladesh

I usually explain to my patients that the right treatment plan depends on the full picture, not only the MRI wording. Many people become anxious after reading terms like “labral tear” or “SLAP lesion.” But the key questions are:

  • Does the tear match the symptoms?
  • Is the shoulder stable?
  • Is function improving with proper rehabilitation?
  • Are work and daily activities still limited?
  • Is surgery likely to add meaningful benefit?

For Bangladeshi patients, this practical approach is especially important. Travel, time away from work, family responsibilities, and access to physiotherapy all affect treatment decisions. A realistic plan is better than a dramatic one.

Related Topics

References

  1. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) OrthoInfo. SLAP Tears. https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/slap-tears/
  2. Johns Hopkins Medicine. Shoulder Labrum Tear. https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/shoulder-labrum-tear
  3. Johns Hopkins Medicine. Shoulder Instability. https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/conditions-and-diseases/shoulder-instability
  4. American College of Radiology. ACR Appropriateness Criteria: Acute Shoulder Pain. https://acsearch.acr.org/docs/69433/Narrative/
  5. Cleveland Clinic. SLAP Tear: What It Is, Causes, Symptoms and Treatment. https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/21717-slap-tear

FAQs BY PATIENTS

A SLAP tear often causes deep shoulder pain, clicking, catching, weakness, or pain during overhead movement. Some patients also feel the shoulder is not dependable during throwing, lifting, or pulling.

Some patients improve well with non-surgical treatment, especially with proper physiotherapy and activity modification. Surgery is usually considered only when symptoms persist or function remains significantly limited.

No. Many shoulder problems can be assessed first with history, examination, and sometimes X-ray. MRI is useful when a labral injury is strongly suspected or when treatment decisions depend on clearer soft tissue assessment.

No. Some patients mainly notice pain during overhead work, sports, or lifting. Others feel clicking, weakness, or loss of performance more than constant pain.

You should seek evaluation if shoulder pain is not improving, if there is repeated clicking or weakness, if overhead function is limited, or if the problem began after trauma or dislocation.

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