In my practice, I often see patients with pain at the top of the shoulder who assume they have a “frozen shoulder,” a simple muscle strain, or a nerve problem in the neck. In some of these patients, the real issue is AC joint arthritis. The AC joint, or acromioclavicular joint, is the small joint where the collarbone meets part of the shoulder blade. Although it is small, it plays an important role in shoulder movement, especially when lifting the arm across the body or overhead.[1][2]
When arthritis affects this joint, even simple activities can become uncomfortable. Patients may feel pain while wearing a bag, lifting a child, reaching across the body, getting dressed, pushing open a heavy gate, or lying on the affected side at night. For many Bangladeshi patients, shoulder pain like this can interfere with work, commuting, prayer, household tasks, and sleep. The good news is that many cases improve with appropriate treatment, activity modification, and targeted rehabilitation.[1][3]
What Is AC Joint Arthritis?
AC joint arthritis means the cartilage in the acromioclavicular joint has worn down or become irritated. This leads to pain, inflammation, and mechanical discomfort in the joint. It is commonly related to osteoarthritis, age-related wear, repeated overhead use, previous injury, or strain from work and sports.[1][2]
This condition is different from problems deeper in the shoulder, such as rotator cuff tears or glenohumeral arthritis. Because the pain sits near the top of the shoulder, patients sometimes point directly to one small painful area with one finger. That is often a useful clue during evaluation.
Common Symptoms of AC Joint Arthritis
Symptoms may come on gradually or become more obvious after repeated strain.
Pain at the Top of the Shoulder
This is the most common symptom. The pain is usually felt over the small joint at the top of the shoulder rather than deep inside the shoulder.[1][2]
Pain While Reaching Across the Body
Patients often notice more pain when:
– reaching for the opposite shoulder
– fastening clothing
– carrying a bag on the shoulder
– lifting something across the body
– pushing doors or getting up from bed using the arm[1][2]
Pain with Overhead Activity
Activities such as placing items on a shelf, hanging clothes, painting, or repeated overhead work can aggravate symptoms.
Tenderness over the Joint
The AC joint often becomes tender to touch. Some patients can identify the exact painful point very clearly.
Discomfort While Sleeping on One Side
Night pain, especially when lying on the affected shoulder, is common.
Clicking or Mechanical Discomfort
Some patients feel a grinding or clicking sensation when moving the shoulder, particularly if arthritis is more advanced.
Why Does AC Joint Arthritis Happen?
In my practice, I usually explain that this condition is often related to a combination of wear-and-tear, repetitive loading, and previous strain.[1][2]
Common Causes and Risk Factors
Trusted orthopedic sources describe several common contributors:
– normal age-related degeneration
– previous AC joint injury or shoulder separation
– repetitive overhead work
– heavy weight training
– repeated lifting
– physically demanding occupations
– sports involving the shoulder[1][2][4]
Practical Triggers in Bangladesh
In Bangladesh, I often see this problem in people who:
– lift loads repeatedly at work
– perform overhead tasks in shops, factories, electrical work, or manual labor
– do repeated household work that strains the shoulder
– carry bags or children regularly on one side
– continue using the shoulder despite long-standing pain
These local realities matter because treatment should fit how patients actually live and work.
How I Diagnose AC Joint Arthritis
The diagnosis usually starts with a careful clinical history and physical examination.
History and Pain Pattern
When I evaluate patients with top-of-shoulder pain, I ask:
– exactly where the pain is located
– whether it worsens while reaching across the body
– whether there was an old injury
– whether overhead activity makes it worse
– whether the pain is disturbing sleep
This helps distinguish AC joint arthritis from rotator cuff disease, neck pain, or other shoulder problems.
Physical Examination
During examination, I look for:
– tenderness directly over the AC joint
– pain with cross-body movements
– painful shoulder loading
– range-of-motion limits
– signs of associated rotator cuff or neck issues[1][2]
Imaging
X-rays can often show AC joint arthritis, such as narrowing, spurs, or degenerative change.[1][4] However, it is important to interpret imaging carefully. Some patients may have arthritis on X-ray but not much pain, while others may have significant symptoms with only moderate visible changes.
Additional imaging may be considered if:
– symptoms are not typical
– there is concern for a rotator cuff tear
– the diagnosis is unclear
– surgery is being considered
Treatment Goals
The main goals of treatment are to:
– reduce pain
– improve function
– protect shoulder movement
– help the patient return to work and daily life with less discomfort
Most patients do not need immediate surgery. In many cases, a thoughtful non-surgical plan works well.[1][2][3]
Non-Surgical AC Joint Arthritis Treatments
Activity Modification
One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is that shoulder pain often continues when the same aggravating movement is repeated every day without adjustment.
