A Very Common, Very Disruptive Condition
Rotator cuff syndrome (RCS) — pain and weakness in the shoulder caused by injury or irritation to the tendons around the joint — is one of the most common reasons people see a physical medicine doctor. It affects millions of people each year, limiting everything from reaching overhead to sleeping comfortably.
Standard treatment is rehabilitation: specific exercises to strengthen and stabilize the shoulder. But for many people, regularly attending in-person therapy is a real barrier. Rural patients, those with demanding schedules, or people with limited transportation all struggle to follow through with the recommended course of care.
The Old Assumption About Rehab
The traditional view in rehabilitation medicine has been that hands-on, in-person care is superior. A therapist who can watch you move, correct your form, and encourage you is hard to replace. Paper brochures sent home with patients have long been a weak substitute.
But here's the twist: what if the key ingredient isn't the clinic itself, but the quality of the instruction and the consistency of follow-up? This trial tested exactly that — replacing the brochure with exercise videos and replacing the in-person check-in with a video call.
Think of it like having a personal coach available on demand. Instead of driving to a clinic, patients in the telemedicine group watched professionally filmed exercise videos showing them exactly how to perform each movement. They also checked in with their provider via scheduled video calls — real-time conversations where questions could be asked and concerns addressed.
The key word here is "asynchronous" — the exercise videos could be watched at any time, on any device, without needing to coordinate schedules. This mirrors how many people already use fitness apps, but applied to medically supervised rehabilitation.
What the Study Tested
This randomized controlled trial enrolled 90 patients with rotator cuff syndrome at a public hospital physiatry (physical medicine) clinic in Turkey, running from November 2023 to June 2024. Half received the telemedicine approach — video exercises plus remote follow-up calls. The other half got the traditional approach — illustrated brochures and in-person visits. Both groups were followed at 15 days and again at six months. Researchers measured pain, shoulder function, exercise adherence, patient satisfaction, and travel burden.
Both groups improved substantially. Pain scores dropped significantly in both groups by day 15 and continued improving through six months. Shoulder function scores also improved comparably. When researchers ran formal statistical comparisons, the differences between the two groups were small enough to fall within what's called the "non-inferiority margin" — meaning telemedicine was not meaningfully worse than in-person care.
But the telemedicine group had one clear advantage: patients stuck to their exercises more consistently (statistically significantly better adherence) and reported higher satisfaction with their care. They also saved an estimated 266 kilometers and over 22 hours of travel per patient per unit of pain improvement.
The telemedicine group matched the clinic group in outcomes — and outperformed them in engagement and convenience.
That's Not the Full Picture
The efficiency gains here matter beyond individual convenience. In healthcare systems that are already stretched — where clinic slots are limited and patients travel long distances for specialist care — a validated remote rehab option could extend the reach of physical medicine services to people who currently go without.
What This Adds to the Field
This is one of the first randomized controlled trials specifically testing asynchronous video exercise delivery for rotator cuff syndrome. Prior telemedicine rehab studies often relied on synchronous (scheduled, real-time) sessions that still require coordinating timing. The asynchronous model studied here is more flexible and scalable — and it held up clinically.
If you have rotator cuff syndrome and have been prescribed physical therapy, it may be worth asking your doctor whether a telemedicine rehab option is available. Not all clinics offer this yet, but the evidence now supports it as a legitimate alternative. If in-person access is easy for you and you prefer direct contact, there's no reason to switch. But if logistics are a barrier, remote rehab should not be seen as a lesser option.
Limitations to Know
This trial was conducted at a single hospital over eight months, and all patients were under 65, with a mean age of 51. Results may not apply as well to older patients or those with more severe rotator cuff damage. The six-month follow-up window also doesn't tell us what happens at one year or beyond. Longer-term data is still needed.
The researchers call for future studies that include older patients, more diverse populations, and longer follow-up periods. There's also interest in exploring whether fully app-based programs — without any scheduled video calls — could produce similar results. If the evidence continues to build, telemedicine rehab for shoulder conditions could move from an alternative option to a standard first-line recommendation, particularly for patients in underserved areas.