The patient is sitting in a chair with their feet supported on the ground or small stool.
Instruct the patient to cross their arms, bend their elbows, pronate the forearms, flex the wrists and make a fist with both hands.
Ask the patient to slump and look down towards the floor.
Instruct the patient to inhale and bring both shoulder blades towards their opposite back pocket while they raise their arms up and diagonally across the body to end with their arms externally rotated, elbows extended forearms supinated and wrist and fingers extended. The head and upper trunk extend as they look up to the ceiling at the end of the movement.
Then the patient exhales and slowly returns their arms back to the starting position.
The patient is sitting in a chair with their feet supported on the ground or small stool.
The patient starts with the right hand down toward the floor next to their right upper thigh with their elbow extended and their arm internally rotated. Their palm should be facing away from them with their eyes directed down towards their right hand.
Ask the patient to inhale as they lift their right arm up and diagonally across their body to end with their elbow flexed, their arm externally rotated and their fist closed and facing inward. Instruct the patient to follow their R hand with their eyes throughout this exercise.
Have them exhale and slowly return their R hand back to the starting position by extending the elbow, internally rotating the arm and extending the wrist and fingers.
They perform 6-8 repetitions and then repeat on the other side.
Once they are able to perform this pattern correctly, you can add resistive bands held in the hands to increase the level of difficulty of this exercise.
The patient is sitting in chair with their feet supported on the ground or small stool.
Instruct them to reach their R hand across the body, making a fist so the palm of their hand faces the outside of the left upper thigh and they are looking down at their right hand.
Ask the patient to inhale and bring their right shoulder blade towards their L back pocket while they raise the R arm up and diagonally across their body ending up with the elbow and wrist extended, the palm open and the thumb facing backward. Instruct the patient to follow their R arm with their eyes throughout the exercise.
The patient exhales as they slowly lower their arm back to the starting position.
Have the patient repeat this sequence 6-8 times then switch sides.
Once they are able to perform this pattern correctly, you can add resistive bands that are held in the hands to increase the difficulty of this exercise.
Note: This exercise has been shown to elicit the highest % of MVIC (100%) for the seratus anterior of any of 10 commonly prescribed exercises for the serratus anterior and trapezius muscles (Ekstrom, Donatelli, Soderberg, 2003).
To Strengthen the Right Serratus Anterior:
The patient is standing with the feet hip width apart and a dumbbell held in the right hand.
They start with the right arm slightly abducted and internally rotated. Then ask the patient to bring the arm up and across their body turning the palm of the hand towards them as they cross the midline.
The movement is a combination of shoulder flexion, horizontal adduction and supination of the forearm.
They slowly lower the arm back to the original starting position.
Have them repeat 3-5 times initially, increasing to 10 repetitions and up to 3 sets as their strength improves.
The patient is lying over a ball with their knees touching the floor. Instruct the patient to raise their arms up overhead with the thumbs pointing up towards the ceiling to make the letter Y. They hold for 5 seconds and repeat 5 times.
Then have the patient bring their arms up out to the side with the thumbs up to make the letter T. They hold for 5 seconds and repeat 5 times.
Next have the patient bring their elbows down towards their sides and raise the arms up to make the letter W. They hold for 5 seconds and repeat 5 times.
Finally, have the patient bring their elbows straight up towards the ceiling with the fingers pointing down towards the floor then ask them to externally rotate their arms and point the thumbs towards the ceiling to make the letter L. They hold for 5 seconds and repeat 5 times.
During each exercise the thumbs should be pointing up towards the ceiling with the arms parallel to their body during the holding period. Instruct the patient to gradually work up to one set of 10 repetitions of each exercise with the eventual goal being 2 sets of 10 repetitions of each exercise for a total of 80 repetitions.
The patient is kneeling with their hands placed on top of a bench or chair. Have the patient move their hips back until they are flexed to about 90º.
Instruct the patient to drop their chest down towards the floor so that their back is parallel to the floor (like a table top).
Their arms should be fully straight and their head in line with the trunk.
Ask the patient to lift their right hand off the bench with their thumb up (external rotation) and hold for 5-10 seconds.
They repeat 3-5 times initially, alternating arms. They gradually work up to 10 repetitions with each arm.
Watch to make sure that the patient does not raise up their back and/or drop their head when they lift the arm.
If with this exercise the patient reports feeling pain in the shoulder of their support arm, have them move their knees closer to the bench to unload the shoulder before they lift their other arm.
The patient is lying on their back with their hips and knees bent and feet resting flat on the floor. Their arms are at their sides with palms up.
Ask the patient to slowly bring the arms up along the floor keeping the shoulders and the backs of the hands always in contact with the floor.
They only raise the arms up as far as they can as long as they maintain contact with the floor.
If either hand or shoulder rises off the floor, the patient is told to stop and drop the arms back down a little. Then reach out with the arm on the restricted side to provide a longitudinal stretch before returning the arms back to the sides.
They repeat 3-5 times trying to bring the arms further up each time.
Goal: be able to sweep the arms along the floor with the shoulders and backs of the hands maintaining contact with the floor and the hands able to touch overhead.
Prone Lower Trapezius Strengthening – Bent Arm Overhead
To strengthen the right lower trapezius:
The patient is lying prone with their right arm bent and the palm of their right hand lying on the table above their head
Have them rest their forehead in the palm of their left hand
Instruct the patient to raise their right hand off the table as far as they can keeping their elbow and upper arm resting on the table/floor
They hold for 10 seconds and repeat initially 3-5 times increasing to 10 repetitions as they get stronger
The patient can be instructed to advance this exercise by raising the entire bent R arm off the table and hold for 10 seconds.
Tapping along the origin of the lower trapezius may help the patient “find” the muscle.
An alternative position is to have the shoulder abducted to 90 degrees with the elbow flexed to 90 degrees and the elbow resting on the table. From this position the patient externally rotates the shoulder lifting the hand off the table. This isolates the lower trapezius from the upper and middle trapezius better than any other exercise and avoids impingement of the shoulder that can occur in more elevated positions of the humerus (Ekstrom, Donatelli, Soderberg, 2003).
To retrain and strengthen the right lower trapezius:
The patient is lying prone with their left hand under their forehead and their right arm down at the side with the palm facing the ceiling.
Ask the patient to slowly lift their R shoulder up off the table/floor by bringing the shoulder blade down and back until their shoulder feels level with their back. The R hand remains on the table.
Make sure that the patient does not pinch their shoulder blades together, but that they draw the right shoulder blade down and back aiming towards their left back hip pocket.
They hold for 5-10 seconds and repeat 3-5 times initially. They add repetitions as their strength improves.
Make sure that the patient doesn’t depress the shoulder by using the latissimus dorsi.
The patient is standing tall with an erect posture with the palm of their R hand facing behind them. Instruct the patient to gently push their R hand back into the edge of an immovable object such as a chair.
Ask the patient to inhale, then exhale as they push their R hand back into the chair, slightly extending through their mid-spine as they bring their R shoulder blade down and back. Do not let them overextend their lower or upper back.
Make sure that they keep their neck relaxed and they don’t hold their breath during the exercise.
Have them relax & slowly release and repeat 3-5 times initially, gradually increasing to 10 repetitions.