
Physiotherapy
Physiotherapy helps focus on rehabilitation and even prevention of various Musculoskeletal and some neurological conditions. Think of going for physiotherapy if you experience loss of function due to pain/injury to your skeletal/muscular system. Our physiotherapist Our physiotherapist can also you improve your quality of life if you are having difficulties with your activities of daily living such as getting up from a chair, going up and down the stairs, balancing problems when walking associated with conditions such as Neurological conditions including stroke, multiple sclerosis or Parkinson’s. They can also play an important role in injury prevention in athletes (ask for our Injury Prevention Program) or provide them with a rehabilitation program after the injury to help them return to their sport at their highest performance level. A physiotherapist can also help with fall prevention in people with balance difficulties (ask for our Fall Prevention Program). Physiotherapists use various techniques involving manual therapy (joint mobilization, soft tissue release, myofascial release), modalities including ultrasound, electrical stimulation (TENS, IFT, etc.), and therapeutic exercises (stretching, strengthening, functional-based activities) based on your condition to help you achieve your rehabilitation goal.
Examples of various conditions treated by Physiotherapy are:
- Muscle strains/sprains/Tendonitis
- Knee pain, hip pain
- Lower back/neck pain associated with problems in the muscles and skeleton
- Frozen shoulder
- Balancing difficulties associated with vestibular conditions (BPPV), neurological conditions like MS, Parkinson’s, Stroke
- Rehabilitation for post-surgical conditions including but not limited to Knee, Hip, shoulder replacements, discectomies, arthroscopic meniscal repairs
- Postural dysfunctions including thoracic outlet syndrome, forward neck/rounded shoulders
- Elbow pain such as Tennis elbow, Golfer’s elbow
- Carpal Tunnel
- Osteoarthritis (Knee pain, hip pain)
- Rheumatoid arthritis
- Scoliosis