Condition · Shoulder

Shoulder pain, treated at the source.

Rotator cuff tears, labral injuries, frozen shoulder and tendinopathy — addressed with precise, non-surgical regenerative treatment.

Before you consider shoulder surgery.

The shoulder trades stability for mobility, which makes its tendons and labrum vulnerable to wear and injury. Cortisone can quiet the pain for a while, and surgery is a big commitment with a long recovery.

RegenCore pinpoints the exact structure that’s failing — rotator cuff, labrum or biceps tendon — then repairs it with your own biology and targeted energy therapy, so many patients regain function without an operation.

Shoulder conditions we treat

Different problems need different protocols — the first step is an accurate diagnosis.

Rotator cuff tears

Partial and degenerative tears that may not require surgery.

Labral tears

Select labral injuries causing pain and instability.

Frozen shoulder

Adhesive capsulitis with stiffness and night pain.

Biceps & cuff tendinopathy

Chronic tendon pain and impingement.

Why patients choose RegenCore

A surgery-sparing path for the right candidate.

Our goal is to keep you in motion. When regenerative treatment can do that, surgery shouldn’t be the default.

Accurate diagnosis with in-clinic ultrasound. Image-guided, in-office treatment. An honest answer about whether you’re a candidate.

Shoulder treatment questions

Can a rotator cuff tear heal without surgery?

Many partial and degenerative tears improve with targeted regenerative treatment and rehab. Large, full-thickness tears may still need surgery — we’ll tell you honestly after imaging.

What helps frozen shoulder?

A combination of guided injections, shockwave and a structured mobility program can shorten the painful phase and restore range of motion.

How soon will I notice improvement?

Most patients feel meaningful change over several weeks as the tissue repairs, with a graded return to overhead activity.

Get a clear answer about your shoulder.

Book a concierge evaluation in San Francisco or Palo Alto.