Non-Surgical Shoulder Osteoarthritis Care In Portland, OR

10305 Southwest Park Way, Suite 300 Portland, OR 97225

Regenexx procedures are non-surgical alternatives that use precise image-guided injections of your body’s own natural healing agents to treat shoulder injuries.

Shoulder arthritis impacts nearly 25% of adults, yet many of the other treatments still used today deliver less than ideal results. Research has shown that surgery is unreliable and that commonly used nonsurgical alternatives can do more harm than good. For example, steroids can break down cartilage1 and kill cartilage cells in arthritic joints.2

Shoulder joint anatomy graphic with labels.
Shoulder joint anatomy – arthritis pain

10305 Southwest Park Way
Suite 300
Portland, OR 97225

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Doctors

Vladimir Fiks, MD, is an interventional pain management physician at Advanced Pain Management Center in Portland, Oregon. He is board-certified in anesthesiology and also holds two board certifications in pain management. Dr. Fiks firmly believes in the restorative benefits of maintaining overall physical and mental wellness as part of the recovery process and finds the challenges of comprehensive pain management fascinating.

Dr. Fiks graduated from Saratov University in Saratov, Russia, before completing an internship at the Jefferson Frankford Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He moved west to finish his medical education, completing both a residency in anesthesiology and a fellowship in pain management at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland.

His commitment to delivering exceptional patient care drives Dr. Fiks to continually expand his medical education, not just in pain management but in other areas, too. It gives him a broad understanding of human diseases, and his patients benefit from his thoroughness.

Using an integrative approach, Dr. Fiks practices both medical and interventional pain therapies. He’s passionate about providing treatments that supplement conventional medicine and offers in-house physical therapy and cognitive-behavioral therapy.

Dr. Fiks speaks Spanish, English, and Russian.

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Areas treated: Cervical Spine (Not Upper Cervical or CCI)*, Elbow, Foot & Ankle, Hand & Wrist, Hip, Knee, Lumbar Spine, Shoulder, Thoracic Spine

Areas Treated

Cervical Spine (Not Upper Cervical or CCI)*, Elbow, Foot & Ankle, Hand & Wrist, Hip, Knee, Lumbar Spine, Shoulder, Thoracic Spine

*This provider is NOT authorized by Regenexx to treat the C0-C1 or C1-C2 levels of the neck or CCI (craniocervical instability).

Woman in telemedicine consult with physician to see if she's a candidate for Regenexx for knee osteoarthritis.

Regenexx patients benefit from reduced pain and improved function, helping them avoid shoulder surgery.

Am I a candidate?

A 2015 study looked at 100 shoulders 13 years after they were treated surgically. The research found that the operated shoulders had just as much arthritis as that reported by other studies in patients who didn’t get surgery.3

Moreover, shoulder replacement is a major surgery involving amputation of the shoulder joint and insertion of a prosthesis. Such an invasive surgery involves a long recovery time and the risk for serious complications. In addition, 40% of shoulder replacements in patients younger than 55 fail within 10 years.3

Regenexx’s procedures for degenerative arthritis of the shoulder joint can be a better alternative for people looking to avoid surgery, lengthy recovery, and overuse of prescription pain medication. Best of all, Regenexx procedures spare normal body biomechanics helping you to remain active for your lifetime.

The cartilage in your shoulder is there to help reduce the friction in the joint and to cushion the bone. When cartilage starts to wear down or is injured by metabolic syndrome (i.e., overweight, high blood pressure, and high triglycerides), that’s called arthritis. It leads to chronic shoulder pain, stiffness, limited shoulder function, and decreased mobility.

What might surprise you is that it’s not the lost cartilage that causes the pain but rather the chemicals your body releases in response to inflammation.

Research suggests that those who have shoulder osteoarthritis before rotator cuff surgery for massive tears are at greater risk for retears and a much higher risk for progression of arthritis after surgery.(3) Additionally, a percentage of patients who don’t have shoulder arthritis prior to rotator cuff repair will develop it after the surgery.

When a bone begins to get spurs (osteophytes) — extra extensions of the joint that are your body’s reaction to instability — it is trying to stabilize the joint. So removing spurs is rarely a good idea

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