Shoulder pain is one of the most common physical complaints doctors hear. Most of the time the cause is exactly what it appears to be including a strained muscle, a worn tendon, a stiff joint, or a night spent sleeping in an awkward position. But in some cases, pain in the right shoulder has nothing to do with the shoulder itself.
Medical experts say a phenomenon known as referred pain can cause the brain to register discomfort in the right shoulder or right shoulder blade even when the joint is completely healthy. The actual source, in these cases, may be the liver.
How the liver sends pain signals to the shoulder
The liver sits high in the upper right abdomen, tucked just beneath the diaphragm. When a liver tumor grows large enough or is positioned in a way that presses against the diaphragm or stretches the liver’s outer covering, it can irritate nearby nerves. Those nerve signals travel upward and the brain, receiving them from a shared neural pathway, interprets the sensation as originating in the right shoulder.
The result is real pain in a location that has nothing structurally wrong with it. This type of referred pain has been documented in published case reports as an early symptom of hepatocellular carcinoma, the most common form of primary liver cancer.
How to tell referred pain from ordinary shoulder pain
Typical orthopedic shoulder pain tends to follow a recognizable pattern. It usually appears after a clear trigger such as overuse, a heavy lift, or a repetitive motion. It worsens with specific arm movements and may come with stiffness, tenderness, or reduced range of motion. It generally responds to rest, physical therapy, or anti-inflammatory treatment.
Referred shoulder pain linked to the liver behaves differently. It tends to sit on the right side, near the top of the shoulder or around the shoulder blade. It does not reliably worsen with arm movement, and the shoulder itself often appears normal on examination. The sensation is more likely to feel like a deep, dull ache than a sharp mechanical pain, and it may persist even with rest or standard treatment.
When that kind of pain is accompanied by other symptoms including unexplained weight loss, persistent fatigue, poor appetite, abdominal swelling, nausea, or a yellowing of the skin or eyes, the combination warrants prompt medical attention rather than a second round of physical therapy.
Why liver cancer is so easy to miss
One of the challenges with liver cancer is that it rarely announces itself with a single dramatic symptom. Instead it tends to surface as a collection of vague, easy-to-dismiss changes that are individually unremarkable but collectively significant.
Feeling full after eating only a small amount of food, a low-grade sense of heaviness under the right ribs, persistent fatigue that does not improve with sleep, abdominal bloating, dark urine, pale stools, and intermittent flu-like feelings without a clear infection are all symptoms that can appear early in the disease and go unrecognized for months. Subtle jaundice and unexplained itching without a visible rash are also associated with impaired liver function and are frequently overlooked.
For people who already have liver disease, cirrhosis, or chronic hepatitis, any cluster of these symptoms deserves a closer look.
When to stop waiting and see a doctor
Most shoulder pain resolves on its own and does not require urgent investigation. But certain patterns should prompt a medical visit. Shoulder pain that lasts more than a few weeks without a clear injury or trigger, does not improve with rest or standard care, is present even when the arm is at rest, or is consistently worse at night all fall into that category. Pain that is accompanied by any of the liver-related symptoms described above makes the case for evaluation more urgent.
Persistent and unexplained pain that does not fit the usual orthopedic picture is the body’s way of asking for a closer look. Listening to that signal early is almost always worth it.

