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Expert Orthopedic & Sports Medicine Insights from Dr. Javier Rios, MD

Supporting active individuals throughout Houston with trusted information on knee pain, arthritis, sports injuries, fracture care, shockwave therapy, regenerative orthopedics, and non-surgical treatment options.

MOST POPULAR ARTICLES

Can You Avoid Knee Replacement?

Not everyone with knee arthritis needs surgery. In fact, many people can stay active for years by focusing on what we call knee preservation, a strategy designed to reduce pain, improve function, and help you maintain your lifestyle while delaying or potentially avoiding knee replacement surgery. Read more

Common Cause of Heel Pain

Not everyone with knee arthritis needs surgery. In fact, many people can stay active for years by focusing on what we call knee preservation, a strategy designed to reduce pain, improve function, and help you maintain your lifestyle while delaying or potentially avoiding knee replacement surgery. Read more

10 Signs of Knee Arthritis

Arthritis is a disease that causes pain, swelling and stiffness in your joints. It can affect the largest and strongest joints in your body. It’s common in knees. Arthritis of the knee can be a serious, debilitating disease. Read more

What is a Primary Care Sports Medicine Physician?

Primary care sports medicine is the medical subspecialty that focuses exclusively on the diagnosis, management and treatment of musculoskeletal injuries and disorders. Sports medicine physicians are highly trained and capable of treating a wide variety of orthopedic conditions, whether they stem from an acute injury, chronic overuse, or normal wear and tear on the muscles and joints of the body. Read more

Houston Sports Injury Tracker

A dedicated sports medicine education hub featuring physician-reviewed injury analysis involving Houston's professional, collegiate, and youth athletes.

Each article focuses on understanding injuries, recovery timelines, rehabilitation strategies, return-to-play decisions, and the latest non-surgical treatment options. Designed for athletes, parents, coaches, and active individuals, this section leverages Dr. Javier Rios' expertise in sports medicine to explain the medical side of sports injuries in an easy-to-understand format.

Houston Astros Injury Updates

Baseball Injury Analysis & Recovery Insights

Explore sports medicine perspectives on shoulder injuries, elbow injuries, oblique strains, hamstring injuries, and other common baseball-related conditions. Articles explain injury mechanisms, rehabilitation protocols, expected recovery timelines, and factors that influence an athlete's return to competition.

Houston Texans Injury Updates

Football Injury Recovery & Return-to-Play Education

Learn about ACL tears, MCL injuries, high ankle sprains, hamstring strains, shoulder instability, and concussion management. Each article provides insight into diagnosis, treatment options, rehabilitation milestones, and return-to-play considerations commonly encountered in football.

Houston Rockets Injury Updates

Basketball Injury Rehabilitation & Performance Recovery

Educational content covering ankle sprains, knee injuries, stress fractures, muscle strains, and overuse injuries affecting basketball players. Readers gain a better understanding of injury recovery, rehabilitation progression, and strategies used to restore athletic performance.

Houston Dynamo Injury Updates

Soccer Injury Treatment & Recovery Timelines

Discover sports medicine explanations of ACL injuries, groin strains, hamstring injuries, ankle sprains, and other soccer-related conditions. Articles discuss rehabilitation programs, injury prevention, and the decision-making process behind safe return to play.

University of Houston Athletic Injuries

Collegiate Sports Medicine Education

Analysis of injuries affecting college athletes across multiple sports. Topics include overuse injuries, ligament tears, stress reactions, concussion protocols, rehabilitation strategies, and the unique physical demands placed on collegiate competitors.

Houston-Area High School Sports Injuries

Youth Athlete Injury Prevention & Recovery

Resources for parents, coaches, and student-athletes covering growth plate injuries, overuse syndromes, stress fractures, ACL tears, shoulder injuries, and concussion management. Articles focus on early recognition, proper treatment, safe recovery, and long-term athletic development.

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Latest Blogs

Frozen shoulder: A common cause of shoulder pain
Frozen shoulder: A common cause of shoulder pain

frozen shoulder

What causes frozen shoulder?

How do you relieve frozen shoulder pain?

Can frozen shoulder go away on its own?

Frozen shoulder, also known as adhesive capsulitis, is a condition characterized by stiffness and pain in your shoulder joint.

Signs and symptoms typically begin gradually, worsen over time and then resolve, usually within one to three years.

Your risk of developing frozen shoulder increases if you're recovering from a medical condition or procedure that prevents you from moving your arm — such as a stroke or a mastectomy.

Treatment for frozen shoulder involves range-of-motion exercises and, sometimes, steroids and numbing medications injected into the joint capsule. In a small percentage of cases, arthroscopic surgery may be indicated to loosen the joint capsule so that it can move more freely.

It's unusual for frozen shoulder to recur in the same shoulder, but some people can develop it in the opposite shoulder.

Frozen shoulder typically develops slowly, and in three stages. Each stage can last a number of months.

  • Freezing stage. Any movement of your shoulder causes pain, and your shoulder's range of motion starts to become limited.
  • Frozen stage. Pain may begin to diminish during this stage. However, your shoulder becomes stiffer, and using it becomes more difficult.
  • Thawing stage. The range of motion in your shoulder begins to improve.

For some people, the pain worsens at night, sometimes disrupting sleep.

Causes

The bones, ligaments and tendons that make up your shoulder joint are encased in a capsule of connective tissue. Frozen shoulder occurs when this capsule thickens and tightens around the shoulder joint, restricting its movement.

Doctors aren't sure why this happens to some people, although it's more likely to occur in people who have diabetes or those who recently had to immobilize their shoulder for a long period, such as after surgery or an arm fracture.

Risk factors

Certain factors may increase your risk of developing frozen shoulder.

Age and sex

People 40 and older, particularly women, are more likely to have frozen shoulder.

Immobility or reduced mobility

People who've had prolonged immobility or reduced mobility of the shoulder are at higher risk of developing frozen shoulder. Immobility may be the result of many factors, including:

  • Rotator cuff injury
  • Broken arm
  • Stroke
  • Recovery from surgery

Systemic diseases

People who have certain diseases appear more likely to develop frozen shoulder. Diseases that might increase risk include:

  • Diabetes
  • Overactive thyroid (hyperthyroidism)
  • Underactive thyroid (hypothyroidism)
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Tuberculosis
  • Parkinson's disease

Prevention

One of the most common causes of frozen shoulder is the immobility that may result during recovery from a shoulder injury, broken arm or a stroke.

If you've had an injury that makes it difficult to move your shoulder, contact us to learn more about exercises you can do to maintain the range of motion in your shoulder joint.

Location

905 W. Medical Center BlvdSuite 201
Webster, TX 77598