Coffin is because am old. Not saving myself to make the team. Reverse is done nowadays with seniors. The rotator cuff was torn apart from a fall. The shoulder popped out 2 additional times within a week for no traumatic reason. MRI revealed what XRays did not. That the shoulder was broken on contact from the fall at the cup and thus the socket could no longer hold the arm in place no matter how the rotator was repaired. Finishing the last of my 24 sessions of therapy in the next 2 weeks. But if they get me to 80-85% of where I was that would be considered successful. There will be some permanent disability such as reaching under and behind the back due to the change in anatomy.
That's a long road milani. Good for you for having what it takes to make a solid recovery. When I hear people complain that they feel worse than before the surgery, they aren't doing the work.
Even with my anatomical TSR, I can't do any exercise (think body dips for the triceps) that places my elbows behind me.
I was lucky that my RC was intact, but it had been greatly weakened before surgery - I couldn't do pull ups, inlcine push ups, chest presses.
I have a friend who has an irreparable RC tear. His only recourse, I think, is a reverse TSR. He's waiting until he's in pain doing everyday things. That's a mistake. A lot of very big muscle groups in the upper back and chest are atrophying becasue he can't do the exercises to strengthen those muscles.
And yeah, the permanent retsrictions with a reverse are a bit more. The biggest risk, as you discovered the hard way, is dislocation.
I've had both knees and right hip replaced. Recovering from the aTSR was by far the hardest and longest. It requires a ton of patience, a good PT, and the willingness to do what the PT says to do. It was worth every minute.
Well done milani. I also had to sleep on my back, propped up, for about 6 months. I actually got used to it!