Disease Info Card

Shoulder Pain

Information about Shoulder Pain: characteristics, related genes and pathways, plus antibodies you can use for research. This page is being enriched constantly, if you see some information you would like this page to include please send your suggestions to us.

Overview of Shoulder Pain

Most recent studies have shown that Shoulder Pain shares some biological mechanisms with arthritis, arthropathy, athletic-injuries, back-pain, bursitis, cerebrovascular-accident, flexed-fetal-attitude, fracture, headache, low-back-pain, musculoskeletal-diseases, neck-pain, neoplasms, pain, pain-postoperative, rotator-cuff-syndrome, shoulder-impingement-syndrome, tendinopathy, tendonitis, weakness.

Among the many pathways, these few ones have gauged particular interests from scientists studying Shoulder Pain, and have been seen in publications frequently: Aging, Coagulation, Flight, Hemostasis, Hypersensitivity, Inflammatory Response, Innervation, Localization, Muscle Atrophy, Muscle Contraction, Ossification, Pathogenesis, Proprioception, Reflex, Regeneration, Sensitization, Swimming, Translation, Transposition, Wound Healing

Quite a number of genes have been found to play important roles in Shoulder Pain, such as ARC, ASAH1, C2, C3, C5, C6, C7, CRP, CXCL10, HNRNPC, NOL3, PSMA7, SLA, SLC17A5, SLC25A5, SLMAP, SST, TAC1. See what Boster has to offer for the research of these genes by clicking the gene name links below and view a more detailed info card/product listing for that gene.

In a later update, we will include information such as current drugs and therapy solutions as well as on-going and past clinical trials for this disease. Plesae stay updated.

Shoulder Pain Related Genes

click to see detail information for each gene

ARC ASAH1 C2
C3 C5 C6
C7 CRP CXCL10
HNRNPC NOL3 PSMA7
SLA SLC17A5 SLC25A5
SLMAP SST TAC1