Why Is the Shoulder Injection-to-Surgery Pipeline So Common in
America —
But Almost Unheard of in Germany?
I have been a shoulder specialist for eighteen years.
In Munich, I never once watched a
patient spend thousands on injections, therapy, braces, and surgical consults — only to sit across from me and
ask:
"What was any of it for?"
Then I moved to Boston.
And in my first week, I saw something about American orthopedics that no textbook had prepared me for.
Shoulder pain here was not being treated like a cycle that needed to be broken.
It was being managed like a file that needed to be moved from one step to the next.
Injection. Therapy. Another injection. Monitoring. Surgical consult.
And somewhere inside that process, the patient was still waking up at 3 AM wondering why nothing had changed.
The first patient who made that impossible to ignore was Linda.
Linda was 58, but pain had made her move much older.
She came through the door sideways — her left shoulder
unable to take even a half-turn forward — then lowered herself into the chair the way you lower something
breakable.
When I asked how long it had been going on, she had to think about it. Like she was trying to remember a time
before it.
"Twenty-two months," she said. "Maybe twenty-three."
I asked her what the nights were like.
"I fall asleep fine," she said. "Then around 3 AM, the shoulder takes over. It feels like
someone is tightening a clamp inside the joint, and all I can do is sit on the couch and wait."
"I started setting an alarm to take painkillers before the pain had a chance to wake me. That was the
only way I could stay ahead of it."
She had been doing that for 19 months.
Then I asked what she had already tried.
"Three cortisone injections. Six months of PT. A brace every night for four months — the buckle woke me
up at 2 AM before the shoulder even had the chance."
"The first injection lasted three weeks. I slept through the night twice and cried both times. I hadn't
realized how much I missed it."
"The second lasted eleven days."
"The third lasted four."
"My orthopedist says we're monitoring it," she said. No anger in her voice.
Monitoring it.
In eighteen years in Munich, I had a different word for that.
Failure.
Not Linda's failure. The protocol's failure.
A treatment that works for three weeks, then eleven days, then four days is not gaining ground.
It is losing ground.
And when relief keeps getting shorter, the answer is not to repeat the same step and call it progress.
The answer is to ask why the pain keeps finding its way back faster each time.
But in nearly two years of treatment, no one had asked Linda that question.
Not once.
I asked her what her orthopedist had said about next steps.
She was quiet for a moment.
"Surgery."
Just the one word. She let it sit there.
"He said if the next injection doesn't hold, that's where we're headed."
Then she opened her purse and unfolded a printed estimate from the surgical center.
$43,500.
Not including anesthesia. Not including follow-up imaging. Not including months of post-surgical physical
therapy.
"I'm retired," she said. "My husband too. We were careful our whole lives. We saved."
She looked down at the number.
"This is almost everything we have left."
Then she told me what the number did not show.
Four to six months of recovery. No driving. No dressing herself. Sleeping in a recliner because lying flat
was impossible.
And her 84-year-old mother, twenty minutes away, still needing her every morning.
Her voice did not break. It did something worse.
It went flat.
"I keep trying to figure out who takes care of her while I'm in a recliner."
Then she said the part I could not forget.
"The surgeon told me he couldn't promise the night pain would go away. That sometimes people have the
surgery and the 3 AM wake-ups just... stay."
She folded the estimate back into her purse.
"So what if I spend everything we saved? What if my husband has to bathe me and dress me like a child?
What if I can't take care of my mother for six months?"
A long silence.
"And I'm still waking up at 3 AM in the same pain."
She looked up at me. Eyes dry. Completely exhausted.
"What was any of it for?"
I asked her something most of her doctors probably hadn't.
"Have you noticed that the pain is worse at night than during the day?"
She looked at me like it was the most obvious question she had ever been asked.
"It's always worse at night," she said. "During the day I can manage. At night it's
unbearable."
"And when during the night?"
"Always the same window. Somewhere between two and three."
I nodded.
"Let me ask you something else," I said. "The pain in your shoulder — do you think it only
appears at night?"
She frowned.
"I don't know. I just know that's when I feel it."
"It's there all day," I said. "Rebuilding. Every hour. Whether you rest or move or do every PT
exercise perfectly. But during the day, your body is producing enough cortisol to keep it partially
suppressed. That is why you can drive, work, make dinner. Why at some point in the afternoon you
sometimes
think — maybe it's finally turning a corner."
She was quiet.
"Then night comes. Cortisol drops. The suppression lifts. And everything that has been
building inside
that joint all day — there is suddenly nothing standing between it and your pain receptors."
She stared at me.
"So the pain isn't actually worse at night," she said slowly. "My body just... stops suppressing
it."
"Exactly," I said. "Or more precisely — suppressing the inflammation.
During the day,
cortisol keeps it quiet. At night cortisol drops — and that inflammation comes through at once."
"Then why doesn't cortisone fix it permanently?"
It was exactly the right question.
"Cortisone works by injecting synthetic cortisol directly into the joint — an artificial version
of the
same suppression your body loses every night. That is why your first injection gave you three
weeks of
relief. It suppressed the inflammation. It worked."
"But it didn't stop the inflammation from rebuilding."
"Every 24 hours," I said. "The inflammatory environment reconstituted itself. The cortisone held
it down for three weeks. Then the inflammation rebuilt past it — eleven days. Then four. Each cycle, it came
back a little stronger than the cortisol holding it down."
"Until the cortisol had nothing left to offer" she said.
She wasn't asking. She was just saying it out loud. Putting the pieces together after 22 months of carrying
them separately.
"So I've had inflammation this whole time," she said. "And everything I've done has just
been
covering it."
"Every single night," I said. "The injections, the PT, the brace — none of it was
touching the source. Just the symptom it produced when your cortisol disappeared."
"The injections, the PT, the brace — none of it was touching the source. Just the symptom it produced when your
cortisol disappeared."
A long silence.
"Then what does?"
She was looking at me like she was waiting for another dead end.
"That is exactly the question European researchers started asking about ten years ago," I said.
"Not how do we suppress the surge. But can we reduce what the surge has to work with. If less
inflammation
accumulates during the day — then when cortisol disappears at night, there is less waiting to
explode."
She leaned forward slightly.
"And?"
"Two compounds kept appearing in the research. Carvacrol — from oregano oil. In
standardized
concentrations, it inhibits the pathway that generates the inflammatory signal at the cellular level. Not
for three weeks. Continuously, every day. Thymoquinone — from black seed oil. It addresses
the inflammatory
environment from a second angle. Together they reduce the daily rebuild from two directions
simultaneously."
She looked at me.
"So instead of suppressing the pain after it explodes—"
"You reduce what it has to explode with," I said. "Every day. Before it
loads."
She sat with that for a moment.
"So it's not just about the pain?" she said.
"It's about giving your shoulder the environment it needs to heal. The inflammation
isn't just waking you
up. It's been blocking every repair window your body has tried to open."
I told her the name.
ShoulderEase. Oregano oil and black seed oil. Two softgels before bed.
She was quiet for a moment.
The kind of quiet that means something landed.
"I've heard things that made sense before," she said finally. "And they didn't work
either."
"I know," I said. "Everything you've tried was aimed at the pain after it appeared. This is
aimed at what the pain is feeding on before it appears."
She looked at the window.
A long silence.
"How long before I'd know if it was working?"
"Most patients notice a change in the night pattern within two to four weeks," I said. "Not
gone. Different. The window shifts. The intensity changes."
She didn't look convinced.
But she picked up the folded estimate from her knee. Looked at it one more time.
And put it in her bag.
"I'll try it," she said. "I don't believe it will work. But I'll try it."
She came back four weeks later.
She didn't come through the door sideways.
I noticed that before she said a word.
She sat down without thinking about it. Reached for her bag with her left hand — caught herself mid-reach,
looked at her own hand for a moment like it had done something unexpected. Then smiled. Not the smile from
four weeks ago that didn't reach her eyes.
This one was different.
She had kept notes on her phone. Dates and times. The way people do when they have been disappointed enough
times that they stop trusting their own memory of feeling better.
Week two: woke later. Stayed in bed. First time in eight months she hadn't gone to the couch.
Week three: four nights past the usual window. Morning stiffness down to twenty minutes.
Week four: she forgot to set the alarm. Woke up at five-thirty. Lay there waiting for it to hit.
It didn't.
"I cried," she said. "In bed. At five-thirty in the morning. Because I had just slept."
"My husband heard me. He thought something was wrong."
She smiled again at that.
"I had to explain to him that I was crying because nothing was wrong."
Linda told me at her twelve-week follow-up.
"I don't know how to explain it to people who haven't been through it. I just tell them — if your
shoulder is
keeping you up at night and nothing has worked, try this before you let anyone cut you open."
"There are still nights where I feel it starting. That low burn. I take my softgels and by the time I
would have been up on the couch — I'm still in bed. It doesn't build the way it used to."
"Before this, I was doing everything right and getting nowhere. Every night the same fight. Every morning
the same defeat. Like I was trapped in a loop I couldn't find the exit to."
"Now I take my mother to her Tuesday appointments. I make her breakfast. I sleep in my own bed next to my
husband."
"I know that sounds small. But for two years, I couldn't do any of it without paying for it the same
night."
She paused.
"I feel like myself again. Not a patient. Just — myself."
I have been recommending ShoulderEase to my shoulder pain patients for two years now.
This is what I have been quietly telling certain patients that I wasn't telling my American colleagues.
Not because I was hiding it.
Because most of them were never taught to ask the question that makes this the answer.
If you have been through two or three injection rounds and each one gives you less time than the last —
If you have done PT faithfully and the nights haven't changed —
If someone has told you they are monitoring it —
Give it ninety days before you sign anything.
The inflammation that wakes you up every morning has been rebuilding inside your joint every single day. For
months. Maybe years. It will not reverse overnight.
But in two to four weeks, most patients notice the first shift. The window moves. The intensity changes. The
brake starts holding a little longer.
Linda forgot to set her alarm on day twenty-six.
That is where it starts.
→ Try ShoulderEase and see for yourself
How ShoulderEase Works —
And Why It's Different From Everything You've Tried
Your shoulder pain follows a daily cycle.
During the day, your body produces enough cortisol to keep the inflammatory signal partially suppressed. That
is why you can function. That is why you sometimes think at 3 in the afternoon — maybe it's finally getting
better.
Then cortisol drops at night. The suppression lifts. And everything that has been quietly building inside
that joint all day surges at once.
That is what wakes you up.
ShoulderEase works by reducing what the surge has to work with — before it loads.
What it does: Each softgel delivers carvacrol — the active compound from oregano oil — in
standardized concentrations. In the research, carvacrol inhibits the pathway that generates the inflammatory
signal at the cellular level. Not for three weeks. Continuously, every day.
This is the same pathway cortisone was hitting — but cortisone was a one-time blast. Once it cleared your
system, the signal rebuilt. Carvacrol provides daily, ongoing support at the source.
What it does: Thymoquinone addresses the inflammatory environment from a second angle — the
pathway carvacrol alone doesn't reach. Together, the two compounds reduce the daily rebuild from two
directions simultaneously.
The black seed oil base also protects both compounds from breaking down in the stomach — so they reach
the bloodstream intact, which is where they need to be to work.
Why Both Compounds Together
Each softgel delivers two botanical compounds that work on the inflammatory cycle from two different
directions. Carvacrol, from oregano oil, reduces the daily production of the pain signal at its source.
Thymoquinone, from black seed oil, quiets the broader inflammatory environment that the nightly surge
depends on.
Together they reduce the daily rebuild — continuously, every day — so that when cortisol disappears at
night, there is less signal waiting to explode.
No injection window. No diminishing returns. No synthetic cortisol.
Whether your chart says rotator cuff tear, frozen shoulder, bursitis, or impingement —
if your pattern is the same: manageable during the day, unbearable
at night, waking in the middle of the night in pain — the underlying cycle is the same. Inflammation
rebuilding all day. Cortisol dropping at night. Nothing left to hold it back.
And that is what ShoulderEase is designed to address.
Before You Decide — Do The Math I Did
Before you decide, I want you to do the math I did when I first looked at what my American patients were
spending.
Linda's file when she first came to see me:
Three cortisone injections at roughly $400 each: $1,200. Six months of physical therapy, twice a week:
$3,600. Prescription anti-inflammatorials: $600. A compression brace she wore every night for four months:
$180. A surgical estimate sitting folded in her purse: $43,500.
Total spent before she walked into my office: nearly $6,000.
Total relief achieved: four days. From the last injection.
ShoulderEase is $39.99 for a one-month supply.
I am not going to tell you that is nothing. For some people, it is not nothing.
But I will tell you what I tell my patients when they ask whether it is worth trying before signing a
surgical estimate.
One month of ShoulderEase costs less than one-tenth of the cortisone injection that lasted four
days.
One thing I will say honestly: the inflammatory cycle Linda had been living with had been deepening for
22 months. It did not develop in thirty days. Most patients who see lasting results do so over ninety
days — not because the product is slow, but because that is how long it takes for a cycle that has been
running for over a year to finally quiet.
If you ask me how long to try it before you decide whether it is working — that is my answer. Ninety days.
There is a three-month supply available at a lower per-pouch cost. That is the option most of my patients
choose. Not because of the price. Because stopping at thirty days, just as things are beginning to shift, is
the most common reason people tell me they didn't notice a difference.
But one month is enough to know if something is changing.
That decision is yours.
→ Try ShoulderEase — Less Than $1 A Day
A Note on Where To Get It
ShoulderEase Is Only Available Through The Official Website
I want to be direct about this because I have had patients come back to me with pouches they ordered
elsewhere that were not the same formulation.
ShoulderEase is not sold on Amazon or any third-party retailer. When it briefly appeared there, products with
similar names and diluted concentrations appeared alongside it immediately. The standardized carvacrol and
thymoquinone concentrations that make this formulation work are specific. A cheaper pouch with oregano oil on
the label is not the same thing.
The only place to get the formulation I recommend is through the official website.
I will be honest with you. Since more patients have been sharing their results, demand has been higher
than supply at times. The production process for a properly standardized formulation is not fast. If you are
considering trying it, I would not wait.
What You Are Deciding Right Now
I have spent two years watching patients do everything their orthopedist told them and still end up on the
couch in the middle of the night waiting for the pain to pass.
Patients who felt like they were failing. Who felt like their bodies were betraying them.
They were not failing. They were using the right effort on the wrong problem.
Here is what the next two years look like on the current path:
Another injection. Three weeks of relief.Then the same couch. The same 3 AM. The same
morning where you wake
up already bracing for the day. You stop making plans that require two good arms. You stop reaching for things
without thinking first. You start organizing your life around what your shoulder will allow. At some point you
realize — you are no longer the person who does things. You are the person who manages pain.
Here is what the next two years look like on a different path:
You sleep through the night. You reach for something without rehearsing it first. You drive your mother to
her appointment. You lift your grandchild. You sit through a dinner without shifting in your chair every
twenty minutes. You stop being a patient in your own life — and go back to just being yourself.
That is what ninety days can decide.
Less than one injection. And if it doesn't work — every dollar back.
If it does —
You stop managing pain.
And start living again.
→ Try ShoulderEase Risk-Free For 90 Days
Wilma Becker
Has anyone here actually tried this for shoulder pain? I'm tired of buying things that sound good and end up sitting in the drawer.
Like · Reply · 4 · 39 min ago
Maria Schmidt
I was the same way. I almost didn't order because I've tried creams, braces, turmeric, fish oil, all of it. I'm on week 5 now. Not "perfect," but I'm not waking up every single night at 3 anymore. That alone made it worth it for me.
Like · Reply · 7 · 16 min ago
Samantha Logan
What got me was the part about cortisone wearing off. That is exactly what happened to me. First shot was amazing for maybe three weeks. Second one barely did anything. I'm not saying this is magic, but the explanation made more sense than anything my doctor said in 10 minutes.
Like · Reply · 11 · 51 min ago
Monica Smith
How long did shipping take for everyone? I'm leaving for a trip next week and don't want it sitting outside.
Like · Reply · 1 · 1 hr ago
Ilse Bierhals
Mine came in 6 days. I'm in Ohio. The pouch was small enough to fit in the mailbox.
Like · Reply · 2 · 24 min ago
Steven Durenman
Bought this for my wife. She had a partial rotator cuff tear two years ago and the night pain never really left. I didn't expect much honestly. Around week 4 she said, "I just realized I didn't move to the recliner last night." That was the first time in months.
Like · Reply · 9 · 1 hr ago
Emma Schulz
Christina you should read this. This sounds like what you keep saying about your shoulder being "fine all day then horrible at night."
Like · Reply · 2 · 2 hrs ago
Christina Miller
That's literally me. I just ordered the 3 month one. I can't keep doing ibuprofen every night and pretending my stomach is okay with it.
Like · Reply · 3 · 1 hr ago
Hank Schneider
Does it taste like oregano? Serious question. I can't stand oregano burps from another supplement I tried.
Like · Reply · 5 · 2 hrs ago
Susan Brown
I was worried about that too. I take mine with dinner and haven't noticed any taste. It's a softgel, not drops.
Like · Reply · 6 · 2 hrs ago
Gisella Neumann
I'm 68 and I don't usually comment on these things. My right shoulder made getting dressed miserable, especially reaching behind my back. Took about a month before I noticed much. The biggest change for me is mornings. I don't wake up already angry at my shoulder anymore.
Like · Reply · 8 · 3 hrs ago
Paula Rowan
Can you take this if you're already doing physical therapy? I'm not trying to quit PT, just want my nights to be less awful.
Like · Reply · 3 · 3 hrs ago
Anna White
I'm doing both. My PT actually told me to keep doing the exercises either way. For me the difference has been I'm not showing up exhausted from another terrible night.
Like · Reply · 4 · 2 hrs ago
Robert Hayes
Week 2 update: not a miracle yet, but I woke up at 5:15 this morning instead of 2:30. Could be coincidence, but it's the first decent night I've had in a while. I'll update again after a month.
Like · Reply · 10 · 4 hrs ago
Diane Morris
The most realistic thing in this article was saying it doesn't happen on day one. I almost quit after 10 days because I didn't feel much. Glad I kept going. Around the third week my shoulder stopped feeling so "hot" at night.
Like · Reply · 7 · 4 hrs ago
Mark Ellison
Anyone else here have pain mostly when lying down? During the day I can work around it, but the second I get into bed it starts throbbing.
Like · Reply · 2 · 5 hrs ago
Maria Schmidt
Yes. That was my exact issue. I could grocery shop, cook, even drive, but sleeping was a nightmare. That's why this article got me.
Like · Reply · 5 · 3 hrs ago