1. What the Biceps Tendon Actually Does
The biceps is often reduced to an elbow flexor. In climbing, that’s incomplete.
The long head of the biceps tendon plays a stabilizing role at the shoulder, especially in overhead positions. It helps control rotation, absorbs force during dynamic movement, and guides tension as the arm moves through space.
Anatomically, it runs through the bicipital groove at the front of the shoulder. This is not a forgiving structure. It is narrow, and it depends on alignment.
When the joint is well positioned, the tendon glides.
When alignment breaks, it is forced into friction and compression.
That is where irritation begins.
2. How Biceps Tendon Irritation Happens (Mechanics)
This is not a “wear and tear” problem. It is a positioning problem under load.
The most consistent pattern is internal rotation under tension. The elbow drifts outward, the shoulder rolls inward, and the tendon is pushed forward in the groove. Contact pressure increases, friction increases, and the tissue starts to react.
A second mechanism appears in dynamic movement. The biceps tendon acts as a decelerator. If the scapula is not set before a catch, the tendon absorbs the force alone. The result is a sharp load spike, often felt as a sudden pinch.
The third pattern is end-range loading. In overhead positions, stability is inherently low. If force is produced from there—pulling, rotating, locking off—the humeral head drifts, and the tendon becomes compressed.
Different situations, same outcome: the tendon is no longer gliding. It is being forced against its boundaries.
3. Pain Pattern: What Biceps Tendon Irritation Feels Like
The signal is usually clear if you know what to look for.
Pain sits at the front of the shoulder. It often appears as a pinch during arm elevation, or when pulling in overhead positions. Underclings are a frequent trigger. Dynamic catches can provoke it sharply.
There is often tenderness directly in the bicipital groove. Pressing into that spot can reproduce the pain.
Functionally, you may notice weakness or hesitation in overhead moves. Even simple actions like putting on a jacket—external rotation under light load—can become uncomfortable.
The absolute classic test:
Press fingers into the front shoulder groove → if painful = biceps tendon involvement.
4. Yellow & Red Flags
Yellow Flags (light load reduction)
- mild front-of-shoulder ache
- pain only in certain angles
- clicking without pain
- pain improving during warm-up
Red Flags (stop climbing temporarily)
- sharp catching pain
- pain radiating down biceps
- weakness lifting arm
- instability sensation
- swelling or heat at tendon
5. Technique Errors That Cause Biceps Tendon Irritation
1. Elbow flaring under load
Internal rotation = most dangerous vector.
2. Catching dynos with arm extended
Biceps tendon =
shock absorber → overloaded.
3. Pulling before scapula is engaged
Shoulder loses alignment → tendon shifts.
4. Gastons without trunk rotation
Shoulder isolated → tendon stress ↑.
5. Overreaching in overhead positions
End-range = minimal tendon stability.
6. Rounded upper back during movement
Scapula loses space → biceps tendon pinched.
6. Immediate Actions (0–7 Days)
1. Reduce overhead & dynamic climbing
Avoid positions that stress the groove.
2. Scapula-first drills
Stability before movement.
3. Light external rotation isometrics (20–40%)
Centers the humeral head → reduces tendon friction.
4. Avoid internal rotation under load
Elbow should point forward, not outward.
5. Gentle pec + lat mobility
Tight pecs pull the shoulder forward → tendon pinching.
7. Rehab Plan — The Three-Phase Model
Phase 1 — Stabilization & Pain Reduction (1–2 weeks)
Goal: center humeral head, stop friction.
In the first phase, the goal is to stop irritation. That means restoring alignment and reducing unnecessary motion. Scapular control dominates here. The joint needs to be centered again before anything else matters.
Exercises:
- scapular depression holds
- scapular retraction pulses
- external rotation isometrics
- “packing drill” (shoulder set before movement)
- pendulum swings (gentle mobility)
Criteria to progress:
→ no sharp pain in overhead position
Phase 2 — Rotator Cuff & Tendon Control (3–6 weeks)
Goal: restore rotation control and tendon glide.
In the second phase, control is expanded. The rotator cuff starts managing rotation under load, and the tendon is reintroduced to movement through slow, controlled eccentrics. Nothing explosive, nothing reactive.
Exercises:
- external rotation eccentrics (slow lowering)
- internal rotation eccentrics (very light)
- YTWL patterns
- serratus wall slides
- prone shoulder raises
Protocol:
- 3× per week
- slow tempo (3–5 sec eccentrics)
- pain <3/10
Criteria to progress:
→ no pinching during underclings
Phase 3 — Progressive Loading (6–12 weeks)
Goal: return to full pulling strength without irritation.
Exercises:
- controlled sidepulls
- controlled gastons
- overhead isometrics
- lock-off progressions
- 2–5% weekly progression
Criteria for full return:
- no pain in bicipital groove
- strong overhead pulling
- stable swings
- no morning soreness
8. Return-to-Climbing Protocol
Step 1
Vertical climbing → neutral shoulder angles.
Step 2
Open-hand climbing with scapula-first focus.
Step 3
Underclings + overhead moves (light).
Step 4
Sidepulls and gastons (controlled).
Step 5
Light dynamic moves with “scapula set before catch”.
Step 6
Steeper terrain + overhead loading.
Step 7
Full load, dynamic climbing, compression.
If pain returns → regress 1 stage.
9. Long-Term Prehab (5 minutes)
- 10 external rotation eccentrics
- 10 scapular depressions
- 10 serratus wall slides
- 10 YTWL reps
- 5 controlled underclings (technique drill)
This keeps the long head of the biceps tendon happy — for life.
10. When to Seek Professional Help
- sharp pain during underclings
- weakness lifting arm
- constant front-of-shoulder pain
- swelling
- pain radiating down arm
- symptoms lasting >6 weeks