If you've got shoulder pain that won't settle — pain reaching overhead, trouble sleeping on that side, weakness lifting a kettle or a seatbelt — you may already have heard the words "rotator cuff." The question that follows is almost always the same: do I need surgery, or will this get better on its own? The honest answer is that most rotator cuff problems do not need surgery, and the ones that do are a specific, identifiable subset. This article explains what the rotator cuff is, the common problems that affect it, how the physio-versus-surgery decision is actually made, and how the whole thing is diagnosed with ultrasound and MRI — plus what your GP can do while you wait for an orthopaedic surgeon in Canada.
What the rotator cuff is — and what goes wrong with it
The rotator cuff is a group of four muscles and their tendons that wrap around the top of the shoulder and hold the ball of the joint centred in its socket. It's what lets you lift, rotate, and control your arm through its range. Because those tendons are worked hard and have a relatively poor blood supply in places, they're a common source of shoulder trouble. The main problems are:
- Tendinopathy — wear, degeneration, and irritation of the tendon without a frank tear. This is the most common cause of rotator cuff pain, especially in middle age, and it is very much a "physio problem" first.
- Impingement — the cuff tendons being pinched under the bony arch above them, often provoked by overhead activity. It frequently coexists with tendinopathy.
- Partial-thickness tears — the tendon is torn part-way through but not all the way. Many of these are managed well without surgery.
- Full-thickness tears — the tendon is torn all the way through. Even here, surgery isn't automatic: it depends heavily on how the tear happened, your age, and your activity level.
The key decision: physiotherapy vs surgery
This is the part that matters most, and it's where a lot of anxiety comes from — because "tear" sounds like something that must be repaired. In practice, the rotator cuff is one of the clearest examples in orthopaedics of a problem where most people do not need an operation.
When physiotherapy is the answer (most of the time)
Tendinopathy, impingement, and the majority of partial-thickness tears are managed successfully with a structured physiotherapy programme — progressive strengthening of the cuff and the muscles around the shoulder blade, restoring normal mechanics, and calming the irritated tissue. Crucially, this is also true for many full-thickness tears in older or lower-demand patients: a well-run rehab programme can restore genuinely good, comfortable function even when the tendon isn't intact, because the surrounding muscles learn to compensate. The evidence here is strong, and it's why a good physiotherapist — not a scalpel — is the right first step for most people.
When surgery is genuinely considered
Surgery moves up the list in a narrower set of situations:
- Acute traumatic full-thickness tears, particularly in younger or active patients — where a sudden injury tears a previously healthy tendon. These are the cases where earlier surgical repair tends to give the best result, and where prompt assessment matters.
- Failed rehabilitation — when a genuine, well-structured physiotherapy programme has been given a fair trial and pain or weakness still limits life or work.
Notice what both have in common: you can't make the call well without knowing exactly what kind of tear you're dealing with. That's where imaging comes in.
If you develop sudden weakness or an inability to lift the arm after a fall or a wrench — especially a specific injury with a "pop" — that warrants prompt assessment, because it can signal an acute full-thickness tear where earlier surgical repair may give the best outcome. This is the one rotator cuff scenario where waiting is not the default plan.
How a rotator cuff tear is diagnosed — ultrasound vs MRI
Diagnosis starts with a clinical examination, not a scan. A skilled examiner can tell a great deal from how the shoulder moves, where it's weak, and which specific tests provoke the pain — often enough to know whether you're dealing with tendinopathy, impingement, or a likely tear. Imaging is used to characterise a suspected tear, not to replace the exam.
Two imaging tools do most of the work, and the choice between them matters:
| Imaging | Strengths | Trade-offs |
|---|---|---|
| Ultrasound | Cheaper and faster; very good at detecting and characterising cuff tears in experienced hands; dynamic (can look while the shoulder moves) | Often the sensible first image |
| MRI | More detail — muscle quality, degree of tendon retraction, associated findings; important when surgery is being planned | Public MRI waits can be long |
For many patients, an ultrasound answers the question — it confirms whether there's a tear and roughly how big it is, quickly and at lower cost. MRI is added when more surgical detail is needed: the quality of the muscle and how far the tendon has pulled back are the things a surgeon wants before planning a repair. The practical trap in Canada is waiting months for an MRI when an ultrasound would have answered your actual question in a fraction of the time — or, conversely, getting only an ultrasound when a surgical decision really needs the detail of an MRI. Knowing which is the right first image for your situation saves months. If you're weighing a private scan to skip the queue, our private MRI cost guide for BC lays out what that actually costs.
Cortisone injection — where it fits
A corticosteroid ("cortisone") injection into the shoulder can reduce pain and inflammation, and its most useful role is as an adjunct: it can settle a painful shoulder enough that you can actually do the physiotherapy that treats the underlying problem. It is not a cure — it doesn't repair a tear or reverse tendinopathy — and there are sensible limits on how often it should be used, because repeated injections can have downsides for tendon tissue. Done under ultrasound guidance, it's more accurate. Think of it as a tool to unlock rehab, not a treatment on its own.
The orthopaedic wait in Canada — and what your GP can do meanwhile
Here's the frustration for most people: even once you and your GP agree you should see an orthopaedic surgeon, the wait is long. Orthopaedic surgery has some of the longest specialist queues in the country, and shoulder problems are usually triaged as non-urgent — so a referral can mean many months before you're seen. Our companion piece on orthopaedic surgeon wait times in BC lays out the numbers.
The good news is that the single most effective treatment for most rotator cuff problems — physiotherapy — doesn't require the surgeon at all. So the wait is not dead time. Here's the division of labour:
Your GP can, right now: refer you to physiotherapy so you can start rehab immediately, prescribe or advise on simple analgesia so you can do the exercises, order imaging (usually an ultrasound to start), and — where appropriate — arrange or perform a guided cortisone injection to reduce pain enough to let rehab work. In many cases, this package alone resolves the problem before the surgical appointment even arrives.
The orthopaedic surgeon's role is the decision that genuinely needs a surgeon: whether a tear should be repaired, and if so, when and how. That decision hinges on the type and size of the tear, your age and demands, and how you've responded to rehab — which is exactly why arriving at that appointment with your imaging done and a physio trial under way makes the visit count. Shoulder pain often overlaps with neck and upper-back issues too; if that's part of your picture, our guide on seeing a back pain specialist in Canada is a useful companion.
The NRI angle — a faster, specialist read
For many in the Indian-Canadian community, there's a familiar alternative worth knowing about. India's leading institutions — PGIMER Chandigarh and AIIMS — have deep orthopaedic expertise, and shoulder assessment, imaging, and rotator cuff surgery there are both faster to access and dramatically cheaper than the private route in Canada. Some patients weigh treatment in India specifically to avoid a year of waiting; others simply want a senior orthopaedic surgeon's read on whether surgery is even necessary before they commit to anything. Either way, getting that expert opinion early changes the whole timeline.
How a specialist opinion from Ginie Health works for your shoulder
Here's the service in plain terms. You upload your history, your examination findings, and any imaging you already have — an ultrasound or MRI report, or the images themselves. Within 6 hours, for $45 CAD, an orthopaedic surgeon trained at PGIMER or AIIMS gives you a written clinical opinion: whether your rotator cuff problem is the kind that responds to physiotherapy, whether and when surgery should genuinely be considered, which imaging is the right next step, and exactly what to push for with your GP or at your eventual surgical appointment.
It doesn't replace your in-person care — it makes the long wait productive, and it stops you from either rushing toward surgery you may not need or waiting months for the wrong scan. If you'd rather talk it through, a live video consultation is available for $75 CAD. No referral required for either.