The infrapinatus muscle is a thick irregular rotator cuff muscle located on the back of your shoulder blade. It has a strong connection to the shoulder and along with teres minor, rotates your arm externally. Most importantly, in conjunction with the other rotator cuff muscles, it is responsible for dynamic stabilization of the shoulder joint, especially during upward movement of your arm.
The shoulder has less connective tissue structure than other major joints. The rotator cuff muscles, including infraspinatus, act as a sort of dynamic muscle/ligament hybrid to stabilize the shoulder joint as you move.
Of the important functions of infraspinatus is to provide force to seat the head of humerus when you extend your arm up.
Trigger points in your infraspinatus refer pain deep in the front part of the deltoids, and sometimes extending down the side of your arm past the elbow to the top and thumb side of your forearm and hand. Infraspinatus can also cause pain on the inside edge of your shoulder blade.
Infraspinatus trigger points are often involved with shoulder impingement syndromes and subacromial pain syndrome. Trigger point referrals from infraspinatus can initiate central sensitization leading to chronic shoulder pain.
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- I can't play overhead sports
Structure
It is contained within the infraspinatus fascia. This is a tough sheet of connective tissue that lines the depression on the back of your scapula and completely envelops the muscle and separates it from the teres major and teres minor. Muscle fibers arise out of this depression is the shoulder blade and from the fascia itself. It originates from the inside 2/3 of this 'fossa' in the scapula and the fascia of the lower trapezius, rhomboids and serratus anterior. It progresses towards your shoulder where it develops a fascial connection with your rear deltoid. Finally its tendon inserts laterally to the middle facet of the greater tubercle of the humerus. Some fibers may blend into the top and rear of the joint capsule. This infraspinatus tendon actually begins to fuse with the supraspinatus tendon just as passes the outside edge of the shoulder blade. There are three sections, or partitions, of infraspinatus; superior (top), middle and inferior (bottom). Like its partner subscapularis, the fibers of the top section run horizontally (transverse), but the middle and lower fibers are angled up towards the shoulder joint and converge into a central thickened tendon. The cranial (transverse) band– This is the upper horizontal part that originates from below spine of the scapula, and progresses towards the shoulder to attach to the angled area at the middle portion of the tendinous part. The tendinous portion of the transverse band is made up of thin membrane-like tissue, which attaches to the tendinous portion of the angled area – but does not reach the greater tuberosity. Some researchers suggest that this upper part shares innervation with the supraspinatus, making these fibers more like the supraspinatus than infraspinatus. The central (oblique) band– The diagonal part is a fan-shaped muscle bundle, which originates from the depression of the scapula and runs at an upward angle towards the shoulder joint. The diagonal and horizontal parts fuse together at the upper margin. The diagonal part occupies most of the muscular and tendinous portion of the entire infraspinatus. The distinct features of the diagonal part are:- Almost the entire tendinous portion of the muscle is derived from the oblique (diagonal) part of the infraspinatus.
- The tendinous portion of the oblique part becomes longer and thicker towards the top.
- The uppermost part of the tendinous portion of the the diagonal part reaches the most forward edge of the greater tuberosity.
Relations
The middle partition of infraspinatus has distinct fibrous band inserting deep to the upper and lower partitions. It appears to attach to the middle and superior facet of the greater tubercle along along with supraspinatus. These deeper fibers pass at sharp angles to merge with the supraspinatus muscle above and cross the rotator cuff interval, finally attaching to the biceps tendon and subscapularis tendon on the front of the shoulder. The combined structure is thick fibrous tendon is called the rotator cable, linking the front and back sides of the rotator cuff together. The rotator crescent is the terminal connection of the supraspinatus and infraspinatus tendons that inserts onto the humerus next to the rotator cable. The rotator cable protects the rotator crescent by intrinsically transferring forces from the upper rear side of the rotator cuff to the front. This complicated arrangement allows the rotator cuff to work in a coordinated way no matter how your shoulder moves. The trapezoidal insertion of the infraspinatus onto the humerus is much larger than the equivalent insertion of the supraspinatus, one reason why the stronger infraspinatus is involved in rotator cuff tears almost as frequently as the supraspinatus.Variation
The tendon of this muscle is sometimes separated from the capsule of the shoulder-joint by a bursa, which may communicate with the joint cavity. The infraspinatus is frequently fused with the teres minor.Professional Treatment With Us
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Clearly, everyone is different. Many of us have additional challenges and complications. Naturally, we tailor our treatment plans to the individual. However, there are common foundations in this work with everyone.
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