Chronic Back Pain Doesn’t Have to Control Your Life
Is Chronic Back Pain Slowing You Down? PT is the Answer
Did you know that approximately 80 percent of Americans have experienced (or will experience) back pain?
Do you feel as if your chronic back pain has locked you out of your own life? This nagging, excruciating symptom can stem from a variety of underlying causes, in some cases growing progressively worse from day to day until you can hardly move at all.
Read full blogAre You Experiencing Any of These 5 Symptoms? We Can Help!
Physical Therapy Can Help You Feel Like Yourself Once Again!
At our PT clinic, our experienced team members work with older adults, men, women, and children who face a variety of acute and chronic health problems.
But it’s not just the pain we can help with! Each of our physical therapists has received advanced training in anatomy, human movement, and more. This means that there are many ways in which a physical therapist can improve your function and quality of life, as well as several signs and symptoms, in addition to pain relief addressed at the root cause.
Read full blogDon’t Let Herniated Discs Slow You Down – Find Relief Today
Herniated Discs Don’t Have to Dictate Your Life!
Living with back pain can be frustrating, especially when it doesn’t seem like anything can make it better.
At our PT Clinic, we invite you to call us to schedule a consultation if you are concerned about your back pain symptoms.
They could be caused by a herniated disc. If that is the case, a physical therapist can help you feel better and even restore health and healing to the damaged disc.
Read full blogYou Don’t Need to Live Life With Opioids – PT Can Allow for Natural Pain Relief
Relieve Your Pain with Holistic Methods!
Chronic pain can become a huge burden, affecting just about every aspect of your life until it seems impossible to feel that things will ever be “normal” again.
Whether as a result of wear and tear over time, or following a traumatic experience such as injury or a car accident, chronic pain can become increasingly difficult to cope with as time passes.
Learning to cope with discomfort is not always realistic.
Read full blogIf You Have Arthritis, You’re Not Alone
Physical Therapy Can Help You Find the Relief You’ve Been Looking For
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), almost a quarter of all American adults are living with arthritis! This means that every day, over 54 million people live with stiff, achy, swollen, and sore joints.
If you or a loved one has been affected by arthritis in your neck, back, shoulders, wrist, hip, knee, or other joint, we encourage you to call our clinic today to schedule a consultation.
Read full blogPhysical Therapy for Non-Pharmaceutical Arthritis Pain Management
Stiffness and discomfort don’t have to be a part of our daily lives — and yet many people assume that they’re doomed to suffer from arthritis pain. If you’ve been losing more and more of your mobility and productivity due to chronic joint inflammation, you may be disappointed by the use of painkilling drugs or even alarmed by the potential dangers of such drugs. Fortunately, you have a safer, more effective path toward arthritis pain management: physical therapy.
Read full blogFind Help for Your Arthritis Pains Today
If you have arthritis, then you know all about the difficulties with moving and functioning in daily life that it can present. What you might not know, however, is that physical therapy can help you find relief from your arthritis pain. There is no cure for arthritis, but by using the exercises and techniques that your physical therapist can teach you, the onset of arthritis can be slowed and you will experience less pain overall.
Read full blogArthritic Aches and Pains? Get Help Today With Physical Therapy
Are you living with arthritis? If so, you know how limiting it can be to one’s life. Arthritis is a disorder of the joints that millions of people live with. It results in joint inflammation that can cause aches, pains, stiffness, and limited mobility. While there are over 100 types of arthritis, they are typically split into two categories: monoarthritis, meaning only one joint is affected, and oligoarthritis, meaning multiple joints are affected.
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