Shockwave Therapy

The treatment can also promote healing after orthopedic surgery — for instance, if a hip impingement has damaged tendons and ligaments around the hip. Surgery may correct the hip impingement, but after years of overworking and degeneration because of the impingement, the surrounding tendons often remain painful. Shockwave therapy can be used to address this secondary issue.
Shockwave therapy is used to reduce pain and promote healing from tendinopathy and many other sports injuries. Some examples include:
- Foot Pain: Plantar Fasciitis and Achilles’ Tendinopathy
- Achilles’ Tendinopathies
- Knee Pain: Patella Tendinopathy (Jumper’s Knee)
- Leg Pain: Hamstring injuries
- Hip Pain: Rectus Femoris and lateral hip pain with Gluteal Tendinopathies
- Elbow Pain: Little League Elbow and Tennis Elbow
- Shoulder Pain: Rotator Cuff injuries
How Does Shockwave Therapy Work?
There are two types of shockwave therapy. Usually, patients receive both types:
- Focused Shockwave Therapy sends waves into a small area.
- Radial Shockwave Therapy delivers shockwaves over a broader area, for instance, along the length of an injured tendon.



