The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
swift-marten-199

Doing great in PT then suddenly WAY worse — is this normal or am I panicking?

Hey everyone, just needed to vent and also genuinely want to know if anyone else has experienced this.

Back in late spring I got hit from behind while waiting at a red light. The other driver barely slowed down before plowing into me — my car was pushed forward a solid 15 feet. Both vehicles were pretty messed up. I walked away thinking I got lucky with just some neck stiffness and tension headaches. Started physical therapy about two weeks later.

For the first six or seven weeks, I felt like I was genuinely crushing it. My PT was happy with me, I was sleeping better, range of motion was coming back. I even started thinking maybe I'd be back to normal before summer ended.

Then out of nowhere, three days ago I sneezed — just a regular sneeze — and something in my neck and upper back just seized up. Like, worse than right after the accident bad. I can barely turn my head to check my blind spot. Driving is terrifying right now.

I went back to PT yesterday and she worked on me for a while, gave me some new exercises, told me setbacks happen. But I left feeling discouraged and honestly a little scared. Nobody warned me this could happen so far into recovery.

Has anyone else hit a wall like this weeks into PT when you thought you were improving? Did you go back to your doctor, push through PT, or do something else entirely? I don't want to be dramatic but I also don't want to ignore something that might matter later — especially with an open insurance claim.

Any experience or just moral support honestly helps right now. 🙏

9replies

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9 replies

  • 11
    humble-grouse-202

    Oh wow, the sneeze thing is so real — mine happened when I reached for something on a high shelf about two months post-accident. I genuinely thought I'd re-injured myself badly. My PT explained it as the tissues being in a 'vulnerable window' even when they feel healed on the surface. It took another three or four weeks but I did get back to where I was. Hang in there, it's not necessarily a sign something is seriously wrong.

    • 11
      kind-marmot-861

      Setbacks in soft tissue recovery are incredibly common and your PT is right that they happen — but I'd still strongly suggest looping your primary care doctor back in. Not because you're being dramatic, but because having updated clinical notes from your GP during a setback is just good practice, medically and for your records. If your symptoms don't improve in the next week or so, or if you start getting numbness or tingling down your arms, please don't wait. That changes the picture.

    • 22
      gentle-marmot-459

      I used to work on the claims side and I'll be honest with you — when I saw a file where the claimant had documented consistent PT progress and then a sudden setback, we'd scrutinize the gap hard. The ones who came out ahead were always the ones who had a GP visit during the flare and updated PT notes describing it in detail. The worst thing you can do is tough it out quietly. Your medical records are your story.

  • 5
    quiet-owl-132

    Please document EVERYTHING right now. Write down exactly when the flare started, what triggered it, how it's affecting your daily life — driving, sleeping, working, all of it. Insurance companies love to point to a period of 'good progress' in PT records and argue your injury was resolved before a setback. Don't let a sneeze become their excuse to lowball you.

  • 18
    mellow-finch-939

    From a claims standpoint, this kind of setback during active treatment is actually pretty well-recognized — it's not unusual for it to factor into the overall picture of your injury. What matters is that it's documented. Make sure your PT is noting the flare in your chart, and seriously consider calling your GP for even just a quick check-in visit. Any gap in medical care can be used to argue your injury wasn't as serious as you're saying, even when that's totally unfair. Not legal advice, just process stuff.

    • 9
      steady-wanderer987

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 16
    daring-heron-604

    Ugh I'm so sorry, that sounds really scary and discouraging especially when you were feeling so positive about your progress. Please don't feel like you're overreacting — your body went through something traumatic and healing isn't linear. Be gentle with yourself. 💙

  • 20
    spry-crane-140

    Call your GP today. Not tomorrow. Just do it. Even if it's a telehealth appointment. You want that visit on record before the insurance timeline gets too far out from your flare-up date. Your PT is great but a doctor's note carries more weight if this ends up in a dispute later.

  • 14
    calm-marmot-120

    When you say it feels 'worse than right after the accident' — are you talking pain level, or are you also getting new symptoms like numbness, headaches, or dizziness? That distinction matters a lot for figuring out whether this is a standard soft tissue flare or something that needs imaging. A sneeze can absolutely aggravate an existing strain, but it can also reveal something that was there all along and wasn't showing up yet.