Condition · Shoulder & Arm

Bursitis.
Quiet the bursa. Address the mechanics.

Inflammation of a bursa — most commonly subacromial, trochanteric, or olecranon — produces focal pain with motion and pressure. Targeted injection plus correction of contributing mechanics resolves most cases.

Who It's For

If this is you, we can help.

Focal pain over a known bursal location. Worse with specific motions or with direct pressure. Sometimes warmth and swelling. Often a history of overuse, postural changes, or a specific triggering activity.

What to Expect

Your first visit.

Focused examination. Ultrasound to confirm the bursa is involved and to rule out adjacent tendon pathology. A staged plan starting with anti-inflammatory medication, activity modification, and PT focused on the underlying mechanics.

Treatment Options

Injection plus mechanics.

Ultrasound-guided corticosteroid injection for symptomatic relief, paired with PT and ergonomic correction to address the underlying mechanical contributor. Most bursitis resolves with a single injection and a focused rehab program.

Stop accepting the downtime.

Treat the bursa. Fix the mechanics. Schedule a consultation at any Triumph location.