Joint pain and injury care
built around evaluation first.

We start with your history, your goals, and your imaging — before any care discussion begins. That's how we determine what fits.

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Pain is not one-size-fits-all. Your evaluation shouldn't be either.

The same symptom — knee pain, shoulder stiffness, radiating nerve discomfort — can come from different causes. Our clinic starts with clinical context so patients understand what may fit, what may not, and what should happen next.

Step 1

History and symptoms

Pain location, swelling, stiffness, clicking, instability, accident history, and prior care all matter.

Step 2

Function and goals

Walking, stairs, work demands, sports, sleep, and daily mobility help shape the conversation.

Step 3

Records and imaging

Prior imaging or reports can help. Additional imaging may be discussed when clinically appropriate.

Step 4

Clear next steps

The plan should explain conservative options, documentation needs, alternatives, and follow-up.

Care paths are discussed after the problem is understood.

Our clinic can discuss conservative care, targeted injections, and regenerative options when clinically appropriate. Regenerative care topics are handled as education-first discussions after evaluation and within applicable regulatory standards.

Conservative Care

Start with practical options

Education, activity changes, chiropractic care, therapy, referral, or other conservative care may be part of the discussion.

Joint Injections

Targeted joint care

Injection options are planned around history, exam findings, location of symptoms, and clinical appropriateness.

Regenerative Topics

Education-first discussions

Regenerative care discussions require candidacy review, evidence-limit explanation, and no outcome promises.

Follow-Up

Document response

Progress, symptoms, function, and patient goals guide whether the plan should continue, change, or pause.

Important Notice

No promise of outcome.

All content on this website is educational only. Regenerative products and procedures are not FDA-approved to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease, and individual results vary.

  • Evaluation required before recommendations
  • Alternatives and limits should be explained
  • Urgent symptoms need appropriate medical attention
Decision Support

What patients should ask.

Patients should understand candidacy, what is known, what is uncertain, expected costs, alternatives, and when referral or surgery discussion may be more appropriate.


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Joint pain can be related to strain, ligament or tendon irritation, cartilage concerns, arthritis, inflammation, prior injury, or accident-related trauma. Neuropathy symptoms may involve nerve irritation, tingling, numbness, burning, or radiating discomfort that should be evaluated in context. A consultation helps determine what information should be reviewed next.

Not always. Prior imaging or reports can be helpful if you already have them. Our providers can discuss whether imaging or additional documentation may be clinically appropriate after evaluation.

Some patients explore conservative options before making major care decisions, but surgery cannot be ruled in or out from a website page. We discuss realistic options, alternatives, and referral needs after clinical context is reviewed.

No. Outcomes cannot be guaranteed. Regenerative medicine discussions depend on candidacy, history, exam findings, product-specific details, evidence limits, and applicable regulations.

Depending on the situation, conservative options may include activity modification, physical therapy, bracing, anti-inflammatory strategies, injections, referral, or other care paths discussed after evaluation.

Start with a consultation.

We will listen, review your history, explain what may and may not fit, and help you decide whether the next step makes sense.


Aloha (503) 642-2845  |  Salem (503) 390-1552  |  Request a Consultation →