DC 5051Musculoskeletal SystemLast verified: APR 22, 2026

Secondary Conditions for Shoulder replacement (prosthesis).

Shoulder replacement (prosthesis). is a service-connected condition that can cause or aggravate 1 additional disability under 38 CFR § 3.310. Common secondaries include Contralateral Shoulder Overuse Syndrome. Each secondary requires medical nexus evidence linking it to the primary, documented in treatment records or a private nexus letter.

“Disability which is proximately due to or the result of a service-connected disease or injury shall be service connected.”
— 38 CFR § 3.310(a), Disabilities that are proximately due to, or aggravated by, service-connected disease or injury
Evidence Strength:STRONGMODERATEEMERGING

Which secondary conditions are most common after Shoulder replacement (prosthesis).?

Medical Rationale

After total shoulder arthroplasty (TSA) or reverse total shoulder arthroplasty (rTSA), the operative shoulder has restricted range of motion and reduced force-generating capacity — particularly for overhead activities, lifting, and pushing/pulling. The contralateral shoulder compensates by assuming a disproportionate share of bilateral upper-extremity tasks, imposing repetitive suprathreshold loads on the rotator cuff, biceps tendon, and acromioclavicular joint. This compensatory overuse accelerates rotator cuff tendinopathy, subacromial impingement, and acromioclavicular joint arthropathy. The mechanism parallels the well-documented contralateral knee overuse following TKA, with the additional factor that upper-extremity activities of daily living (dressing, hygiene, reaching) cannot be voluntarily reduced the way ambulation loads can be off-loaded with assistive devices.

Key Studies

Yamaguchi K et al. (2006) J Bone Joint Surg Am (natural history of bilateral rotator cuff disease); Keener JD et al. (2013) J Bone Joint Surg Am (contralateral rotator cuff tear progression — longitudinal study).

Filing Tips

MRI of the contralateral shoulder documenting rotator cuff tendinopathy or tear. Document the temporal relationship between the TSA and contralateral shoulder symptom onset. Orthopedic or physiatrist nexus letter explicitly addressing compensatory overuse — note that the VA will not grant this claim without a medical nexus opinion. Personal statement from the veteran describing how the prosthetic shoulder limitations forced reliance on the opposite arm. Occupational therapy evaluation documenting bilateral upper-extremity functional limitations.

How do I file a secondary service connection claim?

File VA Form 21-526EZ and list the secondary condition as a new claimed disability, noting it is secondary to Shoulder replacement (prosthesis).. Submit a nexus letter at the time of filing — the VA does not request nexus evidence on your behalf. An effective date of Intent to File (VA Form 21-0966) protects your start date for up to 12 months while you gather medical evidence.

Common Questions About Secondary Service Connection

What is a secondary service-connected condition?

A secondary service-connected condition is a disability that is proximately caused or chronically worsened by an already service-connected condition. The VA rates secondary conditions separately and combines them with the primary rating using the combined ratings table under 38 CFR § 4.25.

What legal standard applies to secondary service connection?

38 CFR § 3.310(a) governs secondary service connection. It states: "Disability which is proximately due to or the result of a service-connected disease or injury shall be service connected." Aggravation claims — where the primary condition worsens a pre-existing disability — are covered under § 3.310(b).

Which secondary conditions are most common after Shoulder replacement (prosthesis).?

The 1 secondary conditions documented for Shoulder replacement (prosthesis). vary by evidence strength. The most strongly supported include: Contralateral Shoulder Overuse Syndrome. Evidence strength reflects the volume and quality of medical literature linking each secondary to the primary condition.

What evidence proves a secondary condition is caused by the primary?

The most reliable evidence is a private nexus letter from a treating physician or independent medical examiner that: (1) acknowledges the service-connected primary condition, (2) diagnoses the secondary condition, and (3) states to at least a 50% probability ("as likely as not") that the primary caused or aggravated the secondary. Treatment records documenting the progression are supporting evidence, not a substitute.

How does the VA rate secondary conditions?

Secondary conditions are rated under the same 38 CFR Part 4 diagnostic codes as any other condition. The VA then combines the primary and all secondary ratings using the combined ratings formula under § 4.25 — not simple addition. For example, a 50% primary and a 30% secondary combine to 65% (rounded to 70%), not 80%.

How do I file a secondary service connection claim?

File VA Form 21-526EZ and list the secondary condition as a new claimed disability, specifically noting it is secondary to your already service-connected primary condition. Submit a nexus letter and all relevant treatment records at the time of filing. If your primary claim is already decided, you can file for the secondary as a new claim at any time — the effective date will be the date of the new claim.

Can I add secondary conditions to an existing claim after it has been decided?

Yes. Secondary conditions can be added at any time as a new claim. The effective date for the secondary will generally be the date VA receives your new claim (or the date of an Intent to File, if filed within the preceding 12 months). If the secondary was improperly denied in an earlier rating decision, a Supplemental Claim or Higher-Level Review may allow an earlier effective date.

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