Physical Medicine
Our physical medicine specialists provide personalized and cutting-edge care to meet your health goals.
Personalized care from our bone and muscle disorder specialists
Our team works with you to diagnose your condition and create a plan of action that will work with your lifestyle and personal goals.
Team approach
Your input is crucial to positive medical outcomes, and together we’ll reach effective treatment decisions.
Convenient locations
We offer physical medicine care at a wide variety of locations, bringing you quality care close to home.
Experienced specialists
Our experienced physical medicine physicians and specialists deliver the best quality of care possible.
Our services
Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation
Musculoskeletal rehabilitation helps you regain strength, flexibility, and motion after a disease, injury, or illness.
Neurological Rehabilitation
Neurological rehabilitation helps a person recover from a disease or injury that affects the nervous system including stroke, traumatic brain injury or cancer.
Pulmonary Rehabilitation
Pulmonary rehabilitation is for people with moderate to severe lung diseases.
Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation
Learn more about the treatment and benefits of musculoskeletal rehabilitation.
Musculoskeletal (MUH-skew-low-SKEL-ih-tuhl) rehabilitation is a set of treatments that can help you recover strength and the ability to move your muscles and joints. This kind of treatment may be used after an accident, injury, or disease that makes you less able to move your muscles or joints. Your musculoskeletal system is the muscles and bones in your body. These are the parts of your body that help you move, lift, and work with tools. Many injuries and diseases can damage your bones and muscles or make it harder to use them. Some of these include:
- Tendonitis (ten-DUHN-i-TIS) in your shoulder, arm, or ankle
- Muscle tears
- Ligament (LIH-guh-mint) sprains or tears
- Inflammation within the bursae and joints
- Rheumatoid (ROO-muh-TOYD) arthritis
- Carpal tunnel syndrome
- Tumors
- Ganglion cysts
- Hernias
- Foreign bodies like splinters or glass in your muscles
There are many benefits of musculoskeletal rehabilitation:
- You can regain function in bones, joints, and muscles that have been damaged due to the injury, illness, or surgery.
- Occupational therapy can give you back the skills you need to do your job or other life tasks independently.
- Rehabilitation can help you build strength and flexibility, helping with the symptoms of chronic pain.
- Musculoskeletal rehabilitation can address problems with your knee, elbow, hip, shoulder, back, or neck.
If you have a condition that affects your musculoskeletal system, your healthcare provider may recommend several different kinds of treatment, including rehabilitation.
- Rehabilitation. Rehabilitation is a treatment that can help you recover from a serious injury, illness, or surgery. After these events, you may need time to regain your strength, re-learn skills, or find new ways of doing the things that you were able to do before. Musculoskeletal rehabilitation is a form of orthopedic (or-thuh-PEE-dik) rehab that can help you with your strength, fitness, and ability to move.
- Occupational Therapy. Occupational therapy is a kind of treatment that helps people be independent in all parts of their life. Occupational therapy is used for people recovering from injuries or illness, as well as children and adults with disabilities, and older people who are having age-related concerns.
Neurological Rehabilitation
Learn more about the treatment and benefits of neurological rehabilitation.
Neurological rehabilitation (rehab) is treatment to help a person recover from a disease or injury that affects the nervous system. You may need rehab include if you’ve had a stroke, traumatic brain injury, degenerative nerve disease, cancer, or an infection. Depending on the damage to the nerves and your treatment plan, the rehab team may include a neurologist, orthopedist, psychologist, physical therapist, speech therapist, or occupational therapist.
Nerves are your body’s electrical system. They are found everywhere in your body and power in everything your body does. Damage to your nerves can cause pain and affect the ability to function—from walking to swallowing to learning and speaking. Common diseases and injuries that cause nerve damage include:
- Stroke
- Traumatic (severe) brain injury or spinal cord injury
- Infections that affect the nervous system, such as meningitis
- Immune disorders that damage the nerves, such as multiple sclerosis
- Degenerative diseases of the nerves, such as Alzheimer’s disease, Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, and ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease)
- Tumors of the brain and spinal cord
- Diseases that cause nerve pain and damage, such as diabetes
- Cerebral palsy
Neurological rehab has many benefits. It can help you regain your independence and do the following:
- Get back to your daily activities and learn new ways of doing things
- Manage symptoms like pain and tremors (shaking)
- Use assistive devices like crutches, walkers, or wheelchairs
Your rehab plan will depend on your injury or condition. For example, if you have trouble speaking or swallowing, a speech therapist can help you learn how to do these things again. An occupational therapist might help you learn how to cook meals for yourself or shower safely. And a physical therapist might help you stand and walk again. Some common things you might learn in neurological rehabilitation include:
- Exercises to strengthen your body, improve balance, and move safely, with or without assistive equipment New ways to be physically active with a disability
- Counseling and therapy to help with social and emotional challenges
- Speech-language therapy to help with talking, swallowing, language, and communication
- Instruction on how to safely use crutches, walkers, or a wheelchair
Pulmonary Rehabilitation
Learn more about the treatment and benefits of pulmonary rehabilitation.
Pulmonary rehab (short for pulmonary rehabilitation or PR) is a program for people with moderate or severe lung disease. It’s run by a team of doctors, nurses, respiratory therapists, exercise physiologists, and registered dietitian nutritionists. A pulmonary rehab program includes:
- Exercise training to make your body stronger and give you more energy
- Education about your lung condition and what you can do to breathe easier
Pulmonary rehab isn’t “one size fits all.” The rehab team will work with you to create a plan that is based on your condition, needs, and goals. The goal is to create a program that is designed to meet your exact needs.
Doctors often prescribe pulmonary rehab for people with the following conditions:
- COPD (chronic obstructive lung disease)
- Interstitial lung disease
- Sarcoidosis
- Hypersensitivity pneumonitis
- Pulmonary hypertension
- Asthma
- Other chronic lung diseases
Studies show that pulmonary rehab programs make a big difference for people at all stages of lung disease. Specifically, the program can:
- Ease your shortness of breath
- Build your capacity for exercise and activity
- Reduce your anxiety and depression
- Help you stay out of the hospital
Each pulmonary rehab program is different, but they all share these basic features:
Initial assessment. The rehab staff examines your condition, needs, and lifestyle. They’ll try to understand what limits you and what concerns you about your daily life. You may have tests like the six-minute walk test to check your physical abilities.
- Special planning. You’ll work with the rehab staff to design a plan that meets your needs. Your plan may include how often to come to the rehab center and an easy-to-follow exercise plan to use at home. Your plan can be changed as needed.
- Ongoing communication with your doctor. Rehab staff will share your plans and your progress with the doctor who referred you to the program.
- Classes and exercise sessions. These give you the skills, knowledge, and ability to improve your health and well-being. They also give you a chance to share with other people who have lung disease — and who are also working to improve.
What happens in the classes?
Living better with lung disease requires certain knowledge and skills. Pulmonary rehab classes include topics like:
- Your lung disease. This includes learning about your condition and why treatment is important, how it can help your symptoms, and why you must actively follow your treatment plan.
- Breathing techniques. You will learn and practice specific techniques to ease shortness of breath, help you relax, and clear your lungs.
- Emotional impact of lung disease. Your breathing is affected by your mood. You will learn ways to reduce stress, seek support, and cope with the challenges of chronic lung disease.
- Nutrition. You will get information on what and how to eat so that you have better energy, stronger bones and muscles, and a healthy weight.
- Ways to make everyday activities easier. You will learn tips and tricks for conserving your energy throughout the day.
- Exercising at home. Most people with lung disease need regular exercise. Rehab classes can give you advice for how to help you follow an exercise plan at home.
What happens in the exercise part?
In pulmonary rehab, your exercise program is uniquely designed for you. It lets you start at your own pace, and helps you gradually increase activity as you are able.
As you exercise at pulmonary rehab, the staff will watch to make sure you are safe and keep track of your progress. They’ll keep track of your blood pressure, blood oxygen, weight, and exercise ability. If you also have a heart problem, you might wear sticky patches (electrodes) on your chest that are connected to a monitor to check your heart rate and rhythm. The exercise program has five parts:
- Warming up. Rehab staff will help you gradually warm up at the start of each session. This helps your body prepare for a workout and lessens the chance of problems during exercise.
- Endurance activity. Also called aerobic (ay-RO-bic) exercise, endurance activity includes walking and cycling — any activity that gets your heart pumping and your blood moving a little faster. Endurance activity helps your body use oxygen more efficiently. This makes everything else you do during the day — such as standing, showering, playing, cleaning, laughing — easier and less tiring.
- Strength training. This isn’t about body building or struggling with heavy barbells. Pulmonary rehab staff will guide you in strength exercises that use little (or no) special equipment. The goal is to build muscle strength and endurance. Rehab staff will pay special attention to strengthening your chest and arm muscles. When these muscles are strong, they can ease the strain on other muscles and help you breathe better.
- Flexibility. Gentle stretches can improve your balance and make it easier to move. Stretching can also reduce pain, stiffness, and stress. Pulmonary rehab staff can show you stretches to help open up your chest and lungs for easier breathing.
- Cooling down. Slowing down can help keep your muscles from getting stiff after exercise.
Of course, not all of your exercise needs to happen at the pulmonary rehab facility. Pulmonary rehab staff will teach you to take what you’ve learned back to your own home, so that you can keep getting stronger in between pulmonary rehab sessions.