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Integrative Chiropractic and Regenerative Medicine

Integrative Chiropractic and Regenerative Medicine

Integrative Chiropractic and Regenerative Medicine

When Pain Is More Than a Simple Ache: A Smarter Path for Spine, Joint, and Injury Recovery

Pain after an auto accident, sports injury, work injury, or long-term joint problem can be complicated. It may start in one place, but the real problem often involves several layers of the body.

A car crash can irritate spinal joints, strain ligaments, inflame muscles, compress nerves, and change how a person walks or moves. A sports injury can damage tendons, cartilage, ligaments, and soft tissues simultaneously. When this happens, one simple treatment may not be enough.

That is why many patients look for integrative chiropractic and regenerative medicine. At ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine in El Paso, the goal is to look at the whole injury pattern, not just the pain signal. This type of care combines chiropractic evaluation, rehabilitation, medical oversight, functional medicine, and regenerative options when appropriate.

The purpose is simple: help the body move better, heal better, and function better.

Why Some Patients Stop Improving

Many patients begin with rest, medication, stretching, physical therapy, or basic home exercises. These steps can help. But some people improve for a while and then hit a wall. Their pain may not fully go away. Their movement may still feel limited. Their strength may not return the way they expected.

This can happen when the deeper cause has not been fully addressed.

Common reasons recovery can slow down include:

  • Ongoing joint restriction
  • Ligament irritation or weakness
  • Tendon damage
  • Nerve inflammation
  • Muscle guarding
  • Scar tissue
  • Poor posture or movement habits
  • Cartilage wear
  • Poor sleep, stress, or inflammation

Integrative care is designed for this kind of complex problem. Chiropractic care helps improve joint motion and body mechanics. Regenerative therapies may support tissue repair. Functional medicine can help address barriers to inflammation, nutrition, and recovery.

This layered approach can be especially helpful for patients recovering from auto accidents, sports trauma, chronic spine pain, sciatica, and joint injuries.

What Regenerative Medicine Means

Regenerative medicine focuses on helping the body repair damaged tissue. It does not simply cover up pain. Instead, it aims to support the natural healing process.

Common regenerative options may include:

  • Platelet-rich plasma, also called PRP
  • Platelet-fibrin products, sometimes called PFP or PRF-based therapies
  • Microfragmented adipose tissue, also called MFAT
  • Prolotherapy in selected cases
  • Orthobiologic injections
  • Epidural injections for nerve inflammation when clinically appropriate

These treatments are not one-size-fits-all. A patient with knee arthritis may need a different plan than a patient with a disc injury, shoulder tendon problem, or whiplash-related neck pain.

A careful exam, history, imaging review, and functional assessment help guide the plan.

PRP: Using the Patient’s Own Healing Signals

Platelet-rich plasma, or PRP, is made from the patient’s own blood. A small amount of blood is drawn and placed into a centrifuge. The centrifuge separates the blood into layers. The platelet-rich portion is then prepared for injection into the injured area.

Platelets are known for helping blood clot, but they also contain growth factors and healing signals. These signals may help support tissue repair in tendons, ligaments, muscles, and joints (Johns Hopkins Medicine, n.d.).

PRP may be considered for:

  • Tendon injuries
  • Ligament sprains
  • Muscle strains
  • Joint pain
  • Mild to moderate arthritis
  • Sports injuries
  • Some spine-related soft tissue problems

Because PRP comes from the patient’s own blood, the risk of rejection is low. However, PRP is still a medical procedure. Some patients may feel soreness, swelling, bruising, or temporary discomfort after treatment. Infection is rare but possible with any injection. This is why proper patient selection and sterile technique matter (Hospital for Special Surgery, 2024).

PFP and Platelet-Fibrin Support

PFP often refers to platelet-fibrin products. These are also made from the patient’s own blood. Like PRP, they contain platelets and healing signals. The added fibrin network can act like a natural scaffold.

Think of fibrin as a soft framework that may help hold healing signals in the treated area for a longer period. This may be useful for certain tendon, ligament, and joint problems.

PFP is not a magic fix. It works best when it is part of a complete plan that includes:

  • Correct diagnosis
  • Accurate injection placement
  • Chiropractic or orthopedic assessment
  • Rehabilitation
  • Proper loading of the tissue
  • Follow-up care

At ChiroMed, this type of thinking fits the integrative model. The injection is only one part of the recovery journey. Movement, strength, posture, and inflammation control also matter.

MFAT: Fat-Derived Support for Joint and Soft Tissue Problems

Microfragmented adipose tissue, or MFAT, uses a small amount of the patient’s own fat tissue. The tissue is processed into a microfragmented form and placed into the injured or painful area.

Fat tissue contains structural and cellular elements that may support repair signaling. UT Southwestern describes regenerative medicine options, including platelet-rich plasma and fat-derived therapies, as minimally invasive options used for certain joint, muscle, tendon, and arthritis-related conditions (UT Southwestern Medical Center, n.d.).

MFAT may be considered in selected cases involving:

  • Osteoarthritis
  • Chronic joint pain
  • Tendon injury
  • Ligament injury
  • Sports trauma
  • Post-traumatic joint problems

MFAT is often discussed when a patient has more advanced tissue stress or joint degeneration. Like PRP, it must be matched to the right patient and the right condition. It is not a replacement for every surgery, and it is not appropriate for every injury.

Epidural Injections for Nerve Pain

Some patients have pain caused by inflamed spinal nerves. This can happen with sciatica, disc herniation, spinal stenosis, or radiculopathy. Radiculopathy means a spinal nerve root is irritated.

Epidural injections are designed to place anti-inflammatory medicine near the irritated nerve area. The goal is to reduce inflammation so the patient can move better, sleep better, and participate in rehabilitation with less pain.

Epidural injections do not rebuild a damaged disc. They do not fix every spine problem. But when nerve inflammation is a major pain driver, they may be part of a larger recovery plan.

Educational videos and emerging discussions also describe regenerative spine procedures, including platelet-based approaches near spinal structures, but these require careful medical judgment, training, and patient selection (Tekmyster, n.d.; American Academy/Association of Orthopedic Medicine, n.d.).

Why Chiropractic Care Is Still Central

Regenerative injections may help support healing, but the body still has to move correctly. If the spine, hip, knee, shoulder, or pelvis is not moving well, the injured tissue can continue to be stressed.

Chiropractic care helps address the mechanical side of pain.

This may include:

  • Spinal adjustments
  • Joint mobilization
  • Soft tissue care
  • Postural correction
  • Decompression when appropriate
  • Movement testing
  • Functional rehabilitation
  • Home exercise planning

The National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health notes that spinal manipulation may help some people with low back pain, especially when used as part of a broader care approach (National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, n.d.).

At ChiroMed, chiropractic care is not viewed as a stand-alone quick fix. It is part of a larger system that looks at movement, function, inflammation, injury history, and long-term recovery.

The ChiroMed Difference: Integrated Care Under One Roof

ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine in El Paso is built around a multidisciplinary model. This means different providers and clinical tools work together instead of separately.

Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, CCST, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, brings a dual-scope clinical background. His work combines chiropractic injury care, nurse practitioner-level clinical reasoning, functional medicine, rehabilitation planning, and personal injury documentation.

Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, Board Certified in Internal Medicine, serves as Medical Director and Collaborative Physician. She is listed with NPI #1164426749 and Texas MD License #J2933. With more than 40 years of experience as an internist, Dr. Cardenas provides medical direction and oversight within the clinic’s collaborative model.

This type of setup is common in modern integrative and injury care clinics. The MD provides medical direction, while the chiropractor and nurse practitioner-led team support musculoskeletal care, functional assessment, rehabilitation, and patient education.

How Patients Benefit From This Team Approach

Patients often benefit when their care is coordinated. Instead of moving from one office to another without communication, an integrative clinic can help connect the dots.

This matters because complex injuries often involve more than one system.

A patient may need:

  • Chiropractic care for spinal motion
  • Medical oversight for safety
  • Rehabilitation for strength
  • Functional medicine for inflammation
  • Imaging review for structural problems
  • Regenerative options for tissue support
  • Personal injury documentation after a crash
  • Clear follow-up to track progress

This type of care can help patients feel more guided and less confused.

For example, a patient with neck pain after a crash may also have headaches, shoulder tightness, nerve symptoms, poor sleep, and anxiety about movement. A layered plan can address the spine, soft tissue, nervous system, inflammation, and function together.

Functional Medicine Supports Better Healing

Healing is not only about the injured joint or spine. The body needs fuel to repair tissue. It also needs sleep, stable blood sugar, proper hydration, and lower inflammation.

Functional medicine looks at factors that may slow recovery, such as:

  • Poor diet
  • Low protein intake
  • Vitamin D problems
  • Blood sugar imbalance
  • Hormone imbalance
  • High stress
  • Poor sleep
  • Gut inflammation
  • Weight-related joint stress
  • Chronic inflammation

This does not replace chiropractic care or medical care. It supports them.

A patient with poor sleep, high inflammation, or low nutrient intake may not heal as well as a patient whose body has better support for recovery. This is why ChiroMed’s integrative model can be helpful for patients who need more than a basic pain visit.

Personal Injury Care After Auto Accidents

Auto accident injuries can be complicated because symptoms may not appear right away. Some people feel pain immediately. Others feel worse 24 to 72 hours later. Neck pain, back pain, headaches, shoulder pain, numbness, dizziness, and stiffness can all develop after a crash.

In personal injury care, documentation matters. The clinic must connect the patient’s symptoms, exam findings, imaging, and functional limits to the injury.

An integrative clinic may help by providing:

  • Detailed injury history
  • Orthopedic and neurological exams
  • Range-of-motion testing
  • Imaging review
  • Treatment planning
  • Progress tracking
  • Functional outcome notes
  • Referral coordination when needed

This can help the patient’s recovery and also support the medical record.

Sports Injury Recovery

Severe sports injuries can involve the same layered problems as auto accidents. Athletes and active patients may deal with tendon injuries, ligament sprains, cartilage stress, muscle tears, joint instability, or nerve irritation.

The goal is not only to reduce pain. The goal is to return to safe movement.

A strong sports injury plan may include:

  • Joint and spine evaluation
  • Soft tissue therapy
  • Regenerative injection options when appropriate
  • Strength training
  • Mobility training
  • Balance and coordination work
  • Gradual return-to-sport planning
  • Education to reduce reinjury risk

PRP, PFP, and MFAT may support tissue repair, but rehab helps the tissue learn how to handle stress again. This is where chiropractic care and rehabilitation work together.

A Clear Path Forward

Complex pain needs a clear plan. Integrative chiropractic and regenerative medicine can help patients who feel stuck after basic care has plateaued. These treatments are not about chasing symptoms. They are about understanding why the pain persists and building a plan based on the full injury pattern.

At ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine in El Paso, the care model combines chiropractic care, medical oversight, functional medicine, rehabilitation, personal injury care, and regenerative options. Dr. Alex Jimenez and Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas work within a multidisciplinary structure designed to help patients recover with more support and better clinical direction.

For patients dealing with auto accident injuries, sports trauma, sciatica, chronic back pain, joint pain, or soft tissue damage, this approach may offer a more complete path to healing.

The goal is not just less pain. The goal is better movement, stronger function, and long-term recovery.


References

American Academy/Association of Orthopedic Medicine. (n.d.). Epidural PRP outperforms ESI for lumbosacral radiculopathy [Video]. YouTube.

ChiroMed. (n.d.). ChiroMed – Integrated medicine holistic healthcare in El Paso, TX.

ChiroMed. (n.d.). Regenerative chiropractic solutions for joint pain.

ChiroMed. (n.d.). Regenerative medicine: Natural non-surgical healing.

FoRM Health. (2025). Portland regenerative medicine: PRP, MFAT & prolotherapy.

Hospital for Special Surgery. (2024). Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections.

Institute of Regenerative Orthopedics & Sports Medicine. (n.d.). Orthobiologics.

Jimenez, A. (n.d.). El Paso, TX chiropractor Dr. Alex Jimenez DC.

Jimenez, A. (n.d.). Dr. Alex Jimenez LinkedIn profile.

Johns Hopkins Medicine. (n.d.). Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) treatment.

Leicester Spine and Wellness. (n.d.). PRP injections.

National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. (n.d.). Spinal manipulation: What you need to know.

Personal Injury Doctor Group. (2026). How integrative chiropractic clinics help personal injury attorneys.

Reagan Integrated Sports Medicine. (2022). What is in platelet-rich plasma injections?.

Synergy Chiropractic & Physical Therapy. (n.d.). PRP therapy.

Tekmyster, G. (n.d.). Regenerative spine principles and procedures [Video]. YouTube.

University of Miami Health System. (n.d.). Regenerative medicine.

UT Southwestern Medical Center. (n.d.). Regenerative medicine.

Veeva Clinical Trials. (2025). Therapeutic effect of microfragmented adipose tissue Lipogems injection on maximum interincisal opening versus injectable platelet-rich plasma.

Regenerative Spine Care, Shockwave Therapy, and Sciatica Relief

Regenerative Spine Care, Shockwave Therapy, and Sciatica Relief

Regenerative Spine Care, Shockwave Therapy, and Sciatica Relief

Chronic back pain and sciatica can change the way a person lives. Pain can make it hard to sit, walk, work, sleep, drive, exercise, or enjoy time with family. Some patients feel sharp pain down the leg. Others experience burning, numbness, tingling, weakness, or sensitivity to deep pressure in the low back.

Many people try rest, pain medicine, stretching, or steroid injections. These treatments may help for a short time. But when pain keeps coming back, the real question becomes: Why is the tissue not healing?

That is where regenerative spine care may help.

At ChiroMed Integrated Medicine in El Paso, Texas, the care model focuses on the whole patient. The goal is not only to reduce pain. The goal is to understand the spine, nerves, joints, muscles, inflammation, movement, and whole-body health factors that may be slowing recovery.

Regenerative therapies, epidural spinal injections, and shockwave therapy may work together as part of a careful treatment plan. These options may help calm nerve inflammation, support tissue repair, improve blood flow, and help patients move with less pain.

Understanding Chronic Back Pain and Sciatica

Sciatica happens when a nerve in the low back becomes irritated, inflamed, or compressed. This may cause pain that travels from the low back into the buttock, hip, leg, calf, or foot.

Common causes may include:

  • Herniated discs
  • Bulging discs
  • Degenerative disc disease
  • Facet joint arthritis
  • Spinal stenosis
  • Ligament injury
  • Muscle guarding
  • Scar tissue
  • Nerve inflammation after an accident

Sciatica is often more than one problem. A patient may have a disc injury, limited spinal motion, weak core muscles, inflammation, and nerve irritation simultaneously. This is why a simple pain-blocking plan may not be enough.

A better plan asks, “What structure is irritated, and what does the body need to heal?”

What Regenerative Spine Care Means

Regenerative medicine uses the body’s own healing tools to support repair. Treatments such as platelet-rich plasma (PRP), plasma-based products like PFP, and microfragmented adipose tissue (MFAT) are designed to help damaged tissues recover.

The University of Iowa Health Care explains that regenerative medicine may use a patient’s own cells or cellular parts. These materials are collected, concentrated, and placed into the painful or injured area. The goal is to reduce inflammation and help repair damaged tissue (University of Iowa Health Care, n.d.).

For spine pain, regenerative therapies may be considered for selected patients with:

  • Disc-related pain
  • Annular tears
  • Facet joint irritation
  • Ligament injury
  • Chronic soft tissue injury
  • Tendon or muscle problems
  • Nerve irritation linked to inflammation

These treatments are not a quick fix. They are designed to support a healing response over time.

PRP: Platelet-Rich Plasma for Healing Support

PRP is made from a patient’s own blood. A small blood sample is drawn and placed in a centrifuge. This machine separates the blood into parts and concentrates the platelets.

Platelets are important because they contain growth factors. These growth factors act like repair signals. They help the body know where healing is needed.

PRP may support:

  • Tissue repair
  • Lower inflammation
  • Improved healing signals
  • Better function in injured tissues
  • Reduced reliance on pain-masking treatments

Hospital for Special Surgery explains that PRP is used to treat several orthopedic conditions, including tendon, ligament, muscle, bone, and joint conditions (Hospital for Special Surgery, 2024).

In spine care, PRP may be used in carefully selected cases where damaged soft tissues, spinal ligaments, or joint structures contribute to the pain pattern.

PFP and Plasma-Based Therapies

PFP and related plasma-based therapies may also be used in regenerative care. These products may contain growth factors, fibrin, or plasma components that help support tissue repair.

Some providers use these approaches when the goal is to calm inflammation and support healing without relying only on corticosteroids. In some regenerative spine protocols, platelet lysate may be used near irritated nerves. Platelet lysate is produced by releasing growth factors from platelets, allowing them to act more quickly in inflamed tissues (iRehabMed, 2023).

Research in this area is still growing. Patients should always be carefully evaluated to determine whether they are good candidates.

MFAT: Microfragmented Adipose Tissue

MFAT uses a patient’s own fat tissue. A small amount of fat is collected, processed, and prepared for injection into the target area.

MFAT may provide two types of support:

  • Biological signaling to help with healing
  • Structural support, sometimes described as a natural cushioning or scaffold effect

University of Iowa Health Care notes that MFAT uses fat cells from areas such as the abdomen, low back, or thigh. It may be helpful in arthritic joints and tendon injuries because it can cushion and support damaged tissue (University of Iowa Health Care, n.d.).

For spine care, MFAT may be considered when connective tissue support, ligament injury, or degenerative joint problems are part of the clinical picture.

Epidural Spinal Injections for Nerve Inflammation

When sciatica is severe, nerve inflammation may need targeted care. Epidural spinal injections place medication into the epidural space around irritated spinal nerves.

Traditional epidural steroid injections may help reduce acute inflammation and pain. This can be important when a patient has severe leg pain, nerve irritation, or difficulty moving due to inflammation.

However, steroid injections are usually not meant to repair damaged tissue. They may calm pain and inflammation, but they do not rebuild a disc, strengthen a ligament, or restore spinal mechanics.

A large NCBI Bookshelf review on lumbar spinal stenosis found that epidural steroid injections may not provide long-term benefits beyond anesthetic-only injections for some older adults with spinal stenosis (Friedly et al., 2019). This does not mean steroid injections have no place. It means they should be used wisely, with a clear diagnosis, proper timing, and medical oversight.

At an integrated clinic like ChiroMed, the goal is to choose the right tool for the right patient. An epidural injection may help calm a painful flare. Regenerative care may help support deeper tissue repair. Rehabilitation and chiropractic care may help improve movement and reduce future stress on the spine.

Why Shockwave Therapy Supports Regenerative Care

Extracorporeal shockwave therapy, also called ESWT, uses acoustic energy to stimulate injured tissues. It is non-surgical and does not require an injection.

Shockwave therapy works through a process called mechanotransduction. This means mechanical energy is changed into biological signals inside the body. In simple terms, shockwave therapy helps “wake up” injured tissue and encourages a repair response.

Shockwave therapy may help:

  • Improve local blood flow
  • Support new blood vessel growth
  • Reduce pain signaling
  • Improve collagen remodeling
  • Break down unhealthy scar tissue patterns
  • Support tissue repair in stubborn areas
  • Help activate repair cells

Life in Balance Physical Therapy explains that ESWT may regulate inflammation, promote angiogenesis, support collagen remodeling, and activate pathways associated with tissue repair (Life in Balance Physical Therapy, n.d.).

This makes shockwave therapy a strong partner for regenerative injections.

How Shockwave and PRP May Work Together

Regenerative injections bring healing signals into the injured area. Shockwave therapy may help improve the environment around that injured tissue.

This is important because many spine-related structures have poor blood flow. Discs, ligaments, and deep spinal tissues may not heal as quickly because they receive less circulation than other parts of the body.

Shockwave therapy may help by:

  • Improving circulation
  • Reducing tissue stiffness
  • Supporting cellular activity
  • Helping scarred tissue remodel
  • Preparing the area for a stronger healing response

When combined with PRP, PFP, MFAT, or other regenerative methods, shockwave therapy may act like a biological catalyst. A catalyst helps a process work better. In this case, shockwave may help the body respond more effectively to the regenerative signals placed into the injured area.

Why ChiroMed’s Integrated Model Matters

Chronic back pain and sciatica are rarely simple. Pain may involve the spine, nerves, muscles, joints, inflammation, nutrition, stress, sleep, hormones, work demands, accident trauma, and movement habits.

That is why ChiroMed uses an integrated medicine model.

Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, CCST, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, brings a unique clinical view as both a chiropractor and a board-certified family nurse practitioner. His background allows him to consider both the structural and medical sides of pain. This includes spinal mechanics, soft-tissue injuries, nerve symptoms, functional medicine, rehabilitation, and personal-injury documentation.

Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, Board Certified in Internal Medicine, serves as Medical Director and Collaborative Physician at the practice. ChiroMed clinic materials list Dr. Cardenas as NPI #1164426749 and Texas MD License #J2933. With over 40 years of experience as an internist, she adds medical oversight, adult health knowledge, chronic disease awareness, medication safety review, and clinical direction.

Taken together, this type of team-based care provides patients with a broader support system.

What Patients May Gain From This Type of Care

Patients may benefit from ChiroMed’s model because the care plan can connect several parts of recovery:

  • Chiropractic care to improve spinal motion and joint function
  • Medical oversight for safety, diagnosis, and clinical direction
  • Functional medicine to look at inflammation, nutrition, metabolism, and whole-body health
  • Rehabilitation to rebuild strength, balance, and movement control
  • Regenerative therapies to support tissue repair
  • Shockwave therapy to stimulate healing activity
  • Epidural injections when nerve inflammation needs targeted relief
  • Personal injury care for accident-related documentation and recovery planning

This approach may help patients avoid guessing. Instead of chasing pain from one treatment to the next, the team can build a step-by-step plan.

A Clear Patient Journey

A patient with chronic back pain or sciatica may go through several steps:

1. Detailed Evaluation

The team reviews the patient’s pain, health history, injury history, movement, posture, and prior treatment results.

2. Imaging and Clinical Review

When needed, imaging such as MRI or X-ray may help identify disc problems, arthritis, stenosis, or injury patterns.

3. Functional Movement Testing

The provider looks at how the body moves. This may show weakness, poor stability, limited range of motion, or compensation patterns.

4. Medical Risk Review

Medical oversight is important for patients with diabetes, heart disease, blood pressure issues, immune concerns, blood thinner use, or complex medication lists.

5. Conservative Care First When Appropriate

This may include chiropractic care, decompression, soft-tissue work, corrective exercise, nutritional support, and lifestyle changes.

6. Targeted Advanced Care

If needed, the plan may include regenerative therapies, shockwave therapy, or epidural spinal injections.

7. Rehabilitation and Long-Term Support

Pain relief is only one goal. The bigger goal is better movement, stronger support muscles, fewer flare-ups, and improved quality of life.

Regenerative Care Is About Healing, Not Just Masking Pain

Pain relief matters. Patients want to feel better. But long-term recovery often requires more than blocking pain signals.

Regenerative therapies aim to support injured tissue. Shockwave therapy may help improve blood flow and cell signaling. Epidural injections may help calm acute nerve inflammation. Chiropractic care may improve movement and reduce stress on spinal structures. Functional medicine may help reduce whole-body inflammation and improve healing potential.

When these tools are used together, patients may have a better chance of recovering function and reducing repeated pain cycles.

Final Thoughts

Chronic back pain and sciatica can be frustrating, especially when symptoms keep returning. But patients now have more options than rest, pain pills, and temporary relief.

Regenerative therapies like PRP, PFP, and MFAT may help support tissue repair. Epidural spinal injections may provide targeted relief for nerve inflammation. Shockwave therapy may act as a biological catalyst by improving blood flow, stimulating tissue repair signals, and helping the body respond to healing treatments.

At ChiroMed Integrated Medicine in El Paso, Dr. Alex Jimenez and Dr. Maria Cardenas bring together chiropractic care, medical oversight, functional medicine, rehabilitation, regenerative care, and personal injury recovery services. This team-based approach helps patients receive care that is organized, personalized, and focused on long-term function.

For patients dealing with chronic back pain, sciatica, herniated discs, accident injuries, or persistent spinal pain, ChiroMed offers an integrated path designed to help the body heal smarter and move better.


References

Friedly, J. L., Bauer, Z., Comstock, B., Turner, J., Kessler, L., Heagerty, P., Truitt, A., Lavallee, D., & Jarvik, J. (2019). Comparing the effects of two types of epidural shots on pain and physical ability in older adults with lumbar spinal stenosis. NCBI Bookshelf.

Hospital for Special Surgery. (2024). Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections.

iRehabMed. (2023). Treating the spine and nerves with PRP platelet lysate epidural injections.

Jimenez, A. (n.d.). ChiroMed Integrated Medicine Holistic Healthcare in El Paso, TX.

Jimenez, A. (n.d.). Dr. Alexander Jimenez DC, APRN, FNP-BC, IFMCP, CFMP, ATN.

Life in Balance Physical Therapy & Pilates. (n.d.). Shockwave therapy: The science behind faster healing.

Regen Axis Health. (n.d.). Adipose-derived cell therapy MFAT for joints and spine.

SoftWave Tissue Regeneration Technologies. (2026). Shockwave + biologic regeneration: Two paths to healing, one goal.

University of Iowa Health Care. (n.d.). Regenerative medicine.

Wang, F., Cheung, C. W., & Wong, S. S. C. (2023). Regenerative medicine for the treatment of chronic low back pain: A narrative review. Journal of International Medical Research, 51(2), 3000605231155777.

Dashboard Knee Injury Recovery After a Car Crash

Dashboard Knee Injury Recovery After a Car Crash

Dashboard Knee Injury Recovery After a Car Crash

A car accident can hurt the body in many ways. Some injuries are easy to notice right away, such as neck or back pain or bruising. Other injuries may be harder to understand at first. One of these is called a “dashboard knee.”

A dashboard knee happens when a bent knee hits the dashboard, steering column, or another hard part of the vehicle during a crash. This direct impact can push the shinbone, also called the tibia, backward. When that happens, the knee can suffer serious damage.

One of the most common injuries from this type of trauma is a Posterior Cruciate Ligament injury, also called a PCL injury. The PCL is one of the main ligaments inside the knee. It helps keep the shinbone from sliding too far backward.

A dashboard knee can also cause:

  • PCL sprains or tears
  • Patellar, or kneecap, fractures
  • Cartilage damage
  • Meniscus tears
  • Bone bruising
  • Joint swelling
  • Knee instability
  • Pain with walking, kneeling, or stairs

At ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine in El Paso, Texas, auto accident injuries are viewed through a whole-body lens. The goal is not only to reduce pain. The goal is to understand the injury, improve movement, support healing, and help the patient return to daily life with better function.

What Is a Dashboard Knee Injury?

A dashboard knee injury usually happens during a motor vehicle accident when the knee is bent, and the front of the knee hits the dashboard. This force drives the tibia backward under the thighbone.

This backward force places stress on the PCL. Under significant impact, the PCL can stretch, partially tear, or completely tear. Research and clinical reviews describe dashboard trauma as a classic cause of PCL injury because of this backward movement of the tibia (Pache et al., 2018; Raj et al., 2023).

A person may not always know the knee is badly injured right away. After a crash, adrenaline can hide pain. The person may feel sore at first, then notice swelling, stiffness, weakness, or instability hours or days later.

This is one reason ChiroMed encourages people to take post-accident symptoms seriously. Even if the crash seemed minor, the forces placed on the knee, spine, hips, and soft tissues can still be significant.

Why the PCL Is So Important

The PCL is located deep inside the knee. It works with other ligaments to keep the knee stable. Its main job is to stop the shinbone from sliding too far backward.

When the PCL is injured, the knee may not track correctly. The person may feel pain deep inside the joint. They may also feel like the knee is loose or unreliable.

Common dashboard knee symptoms include:

  • Pain in the front, back, or deep part of the knee
  • Swelling after the accident
  • Bruising around the knee or shin
  • Trouble bending or straightening the knee
  • Pain when walking down stairs
  • Pain when kneeling
  • A feeling that the knee may give out
  • Limping
  • Clicking, locking, or catching
  • Weakness in the leg

Some people can still walk after a PCL injury. That does not mean the knee is fine. A partial ligament tear, cartilage injury, or bone bruise may still be present.

Why Early Evaluation Matters

A dashboard knee injury can be missed if the exam only focuses on surface pain. The knee may look bruised, but the more serious damage may involve ligaments, cartilage, or bone.

A proper evaluation may include:

  • Accident history
  • Knee pain location
  • Swelling check
  • Range of motion testing
  • Ligament stability testing
  • Walking and balance assessment
  • Hip, ankle, and spine movement testing
  • Review of X-rays or MRI when needed

MRI is often used to evaluate PCL injuries because it can show soft tissue damage. It can help identify ligament tears, meniscus injuries, cartilage problems, and bone bruising (Raj et al., 2023).

This matters because treatment depends on the nature of the injury. A mild sprain may need bracing and rehabilitation. A complete tear with major instability may need orthopedic referral. A knee with several injured ligaments requires a different plan than a simple soft-tissue strain.

The ChiroMed Approach to Auto Accident Knee Injuries

ChiroMed’s model is built around integrated care. This means different parts of care can work together rather than remain separate. ChiroMed offers services such as chiropractic care, nurse practitioner services, naturopathy, rehabilitation, nutrition counseling, and acupuncture, all within a patient-centered care model (ChiroMed, n.d.).

For a dashboard knee injury, this matters because the knee is rarely the only area affected after a crash. A person may also have:

  • Neck pain
  • Low back pain
  • Hip pain
  • Ankle stiffness
  • Muscle guarding
  • Nerve irritation
  • Headaches
  • Poor balance
  • Changes in walking

When the knee hurts, the body protects it. The person may limp or shift weight to the other side. Over time, this can place stress on the hips, pelvis, lower back, and ankles.

ChiroMed’s integrated approach examines the entire injury pattern. The care plan may include chiropractic care, rehabilitation, soft tissue therapies, medical evaluation, functional medicine support, and regenerative options when appropriate.

Medical Oversight and Coordinated Care

After a motor vehicle accident, medical oversight is important. A knee injury may require imaging, medication review, referral coordination, or a more in-depth medical evaluation. This is especially true when the knee is swollen, unstable, or not improving.

At Injury Medical Clinic PA and related integrated injury-care settings in El Paso, Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, works within a multidisciplinary model that blends chiropractic care, personal injury care, functional medicine, rehabilitation, and medical coordination.

Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, Board Certified in Internal Medicine, serves as Medical Director and Collaborative Physician. She is listed with NPI #1164426749 and Texas MD License #J2933 and brings over 40 years of experience as an internist. In this type of multidisciplinary setup, an MD provides medical direction while chiropractic and rehabilitation providers focus on movement, structure, and functional recovery.

This team-based model can help patients receive more complete care after a crash. The goal is to connect the medical diagnosis with the physical recovery plan.

Chiropractic Care for Knee Injury Recovery

Chiropractic care does not “adjust” a torn PCL. Instead, chiropractic care helps improve the way the spine, hips, pelvis, ankles, and other joints move together.

After a dashboard knee injury, the body may create compensation patterns. A person may avoid bending the knee, limp, or shift their weight. These changes can make the low back, hips, and ankles work harder.

Chiropractic care may help by addressing:

  • Spinal stiffness
  • Pelvic imbalance
  • Hip mobility problems
  • Ankle restriction
  • Poor walking mechanics
  • Muscle guarding
  • Joint stress from limping

When the whole body moves better, the injured knee may experience less abnormal stress during recovery.

Rehabilitation Builds Strength and Stability

Rehabilitation is one of the most important parts of PCL recovery. The knee needs strength, balance, and control. This is especially true after a car accident because the injury may involve multiple structures.

Rehab for dashboard knee injuries may focus on:

  • Reducing swelling
  • Restoring safe range of motion
  • Improving quadriceps strength
  • Protecting the PCL during early healing
  • Improving balance
  • Correcting gait, or walking pattern
  • Strengthening the hips and core
  • Helping the patient return to work or daily activity

PCL rehabilitation must be guided carefully. Some exercises may need to be delayed or modified depending on the injury. This is why a proper diagnosis and structured plan are important (Raj et al., 2023).

Regenerative Options for Tissue Support

Some patients may be candidates for regenerative therapies. These treatments are not a quick fix, and they are not a replacement for proper diagnosis, bracing, rehab, or surgery when surgery is needed. However, they may help support the body’s natural healing response in selected cases.

ChiroMed discusses regenerative options for auto accident recovery, including platelet-rich plasma, platelet-poor plasma, plasma-based therapies, and microfragmented adipose tissue (ChiroMed, n.d.).

Common regenerative options may include:

  • PRP, or Platelet-Rich Plasma: Uses concentrated platelets from the patient’s own blood to support healing signals.
  • PFP, or plasma-based therapy: May be used in certain protocols to support tissue recovery.
  • MFAT, or Micro-Fragmented Adipose Tissue: Uses processed tissue from the patient’s own fat to support healing pathways.

Studies suggest that PRP and MFAT may help improve pain and function in certain knee conditions, especially when used as part of a larger treatment plan (Heidari et al., 2020; Liang et al., 2022).

For dashboard knee trauma, these options should only be considered after a complete evaluation.

Shockwave and Laser Therapy for Soft Tissue Recovery

Soft tissue therapies may also be used as part of an integrated care plan.

Shockwave therapy uses sound wave energy to stimulate injured tissue. It may help improve circulation, support tissue healing, and reduce pain in some musculoskeletal conditions (An et al., 2020).

MLS laser therapy is a type of light-based therapy. It may help reduce inflammation and support cellular activity. Research on photobiomodulation suggests that light therapy may influence pain, inflammation, and tissue repair pathways (Zhang & Qu, 2023).

These tools are most helpful when they are not used alone. They work best when combined with movement correction, rehab, strengthening, and follow-up exams.

Functional Medicine and Nutrition Support

Healing takes energy. The body needs protein, hydration, sleep, and healthy blood sugar control to repair injured tissue.

ChiroMed’s integrated model includes nutrition and whole-person care. For knee injury recovery, this may include guidance on:

  • Protein intake
  • Anti-inflammatory foods
  • Hydration
  • Healthy weight support
  • Sleep quality
  • Blood sugar balance
  • Nutrient support
  • Lifestyle habits that may affect healing

This does not replace orthopedic care. It supports the body while the knee, spine, and soft tissues recover.

When to Seek Care After a Crash

A person should seek evaluation after a crash if knee symptoms do not improve or worsen.

Warning signs may include:

  • Knee swelling
  • Trouble walking
  • Knee instability
  • Pain with stairs
  • Locking or catching
  • Numbness or tingling
  • Severe bruising
  • Inability to bear weight
  • Pain that worsens over time

A dashboard knee injury can become a long-term problem if the deeper damage is missed. Early evaluation helps create a clearer path forward.

ChiroMed in El Paso: A Whole-Body Path to Recovery

Dashboard knee injuries can be painful, confusing, and frustrating. A patient may think they only bruised the knee, but the real injury may involve the PCL, cartilage, kneecap, or deeper joint structures.

At ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine, the focus is on coordinated care. The team assesses pain, movement, function, and the overall injury pattern. For auto accident patients, this may include chiropractic care, nurse practitioner services, rehabilitation, regenerative options, nutrition support, and medical coordination.

For patients in El Paso, Horizon City, and surrounding areas, this integrated model can help connect the dots after a crash. The goal is simple: understand the injury, support healing, improve movement, and help the patient return to life with stronger function.


References

An, S., Li, J., Xie, W., Yin, N., Li, Y., & Hu, Y. (2020). Extracorporeal shockwave treatment in knee osteoarthritis. Annals of Translational Medicine, 8(13), 838.

ChiroMed. (n.d.). ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine holistic healthcare in El Paso, TX. ChiroMed.

ChiroMed. (n.d.). Regenerative therapy for auto accident injury recovery. ChiroMed.

Heidari, N., Noorani, A., Slevin, M., et al. (2020). Patient-centered outcomes of microfragmented adipose tissue treatments of knee osteoarthritis: An observational, intention-to-treat study at twelve months. Stem Cells International, 2020, 8881405.

Jimenez, A. (n.d.). El Paso, TX chiropractor Dr. Alex Jimenez DC | Personal injury specialist. DrAlexJimenez.com.

Jimenez, A. (n.d.). Dr. Alexander Jimenez DC, APRN, FNP-BC, IFMCP, CFMP. LinkedIn.

Liang, Y., Xu, X., Wang, T., et al. (2022). Platelet rich plasma in the repair of articular cartilage injury. Orthopaedic Surgery, 14(10), 2295-2303.

Pache, S., Aman, Z. S., Kennedy, M., Nakama, G. Y., Moatshe, G., Ziegler, C., & LaPrade, R. F. (2018). Posterior cruciate ligament: Current concepts review. Archives of Bone and Joint Surgery, 6(1), 8-18.

Raj, M. A., Mabrouk, A., & Varacallo, M. A. (2023). Posterior cruciate ligament knee injuries. In StatPearls. StatPearls Publishing.

Sancilio, C., Fada, L., Pulido, J., & Mousad, A. D. (2026). Dashboard knee: Injury mechanisms, diagnostic challenges, and treatment outcomes. Cureus.

Zhang, R., & Qu, J. (2023). The mechanisms and efficacy of photobiomodulation therapy for arthritis: A comprehensive review. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 24(18), 14293.

BHRT and Nutrition Strategies for Weight Optimization

BHRT and Nutrition Strategies for Weight Optimization

BHRT and Nutrition Strategies for Weight Optimization

Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy, or BHRT, is often discussed as a way to support better energy, mood, sleep, and overall wellness. It is also often linked to weight management, especially among people who feel their body is no longer responding to healthy eating as it used to. At ChiroMed, the goal is not to present BHRT as a quick fix or a weight-loss drug. The goal is to understand the root causes of stubborn weight gain, low energy, sugar cravings, a slow metabolism, and changes in body composition, and then build a plan that helps the body work better from the inside out.

For many adults, hormone imbalance can make it harder to maintain a healthy weight. This may show up as more belly fat, reduced muscle tone, poor sleep, low motivation, and constant hunger or cravings. When hormones such as estrogen or testosterone drop or become unstable, the body may not handle blood sugar, appetite, stress, and energy the same way it once did. That is one reason Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy has become part of many functional and integrative wellness plans. Research shows that menopause is linked with increased abdominal fat and that hormone therapy may help improve fat distribution in some patients (Papadakis et al., 2018).

Why hormone balance matters for weight management

A healthy weight is not only about willpower. It is also about biology. When hormones are out of balance, even someone trying hard to eat better may still feel stuck. They may exercise and watch calories but still notice that the scale will not move, or that fat collects around the waist more easily than before.

Hormones can affect:

  • Metabolism
  • Hunger and fullness signals
  • Blood sugar control
  • Insulin sensitivity
  • Sleep quality
  • Mood and motivation
  • Lean muscle mass
  • Fat storage, especially belly fat

This is why people with hormone imbalance often say things like, “I am eating better, but nothing is changing.” In these cases, BHRT may help remove some of the barriers that hinder healthy eating and exercise (BodyLogicMD, 2023).

What BHRT may do and what it does not do

BHRT is not a direct weight-loss medication. It does not melt fat away, nor does it replace the need for healthy food, movement, sleep, and stress control. A better way to explain it is this: BHRT may help the body respond more effectively to healthy habits when a hormone imbalance is part of the problem.

Possible ways BHRT may support weight management include:

  • Improving energy so patients feel more able to stay active
  • Supporting a healthier metabolic rate
  • Reducing hormone-driven cravings in some people
  • Helping improve sleep, which may lower overeating
  • Supporting lean body mass
  • Helping the body store less fat in the abdominal area in some cases

This is why BHRT is often described as a treatment that helps healthy eating work better. It may not cause weight loss on its own, but it may help diet and lifestyle changes become more effective over time (417 Integrative Medicine, 2024; Rock Ridge Pharmacy, 2026).

How Evexias BHRT and EvexiPEL may help

Evexias Health Solutions promotes a hormone optimization method called EvexiPEL. This approach uses small bioidentical hormone pellets, usually containing testosterone or estradiol, that are placed under the skin and release steady hormone support over time. Evexias describes this as a way to avoid the “roller coaster” effect that some people may notice with other forms of hormone delivery, such as missed doses, daily swings, or less consistent absorption (EVEXIAS Health Solutions, 2026a).

According to Evexias, this steady delivery system is meant to support:

  • More stable energy
  • Better mood
  • Better focus
  • Improved metabolic support
  • Better body composition
  • Support for healthy aging

When energy is more stable, patients may find it easier to prepare meals, avoid processed sugar, and stay consistent with exercise. When hormones are optimized, some patients also report fewer cravings and less stress-related eating. These changes can make a healthy diet feel more realistic and more sustainable.

Evexias also presents its program as more than just hormone pellets. Its system includes functional wellness strategies, nutraceutical support, and a root-cause approach to long-term health. That broader view fits well with the ChiroMed model, where care should not stop at symptom relief. Instead, the goal is to improve overall body function (EVEXIAS Health Solutions, 2026b).

Why fresh, whole foods still matter

Even if BHRT is working well, nutrition still matters every day. Hormones may support metabolism and hunger control, but food quality still shapes blood sugar, inflammation, digestive health, and body composition. That is why the best BHRT plans are usually paired with a clean, whole-food eating pattern.

A smart diet plan during BHRT often includes:

  • Lean proteins such as fish, chicken, eggs, turkey, and quality beef
  • Non-starchy vegetables for fiber and nutrients
  • Fruits in balanced portions
  • Healthy fats such as avocado, olive oil, nuts, and seeds
  • Plenty of water
  • Fewer ultra-processed foods
  • Less added sugar
  • Better meal timing and more stable eating habits

This type of eating plan can help support steady blood sugar and better appetite control. It can also help patients feel full longer, protect lean muscle mass, and improve long-term results. Nutrition guidance for people on hormone therapy often emphasizes simple whole foods, balanced meals, and avoiding the common trap of depending on packaged “diet” foods that may still be high in sugar, sodium, and additives (Pagdin Health, 2021).

Why BHRT may help with cravings and energy

Cravings are not always just emotional. They can also be biological. Poor sleep, blood sugar swings, stress, and hormone decline can all increase the desire for quick energy from sugar and refined carbs. When patients feel tired, wired, or hungry all the time, healthy eating becomes much harder.

BHRT may help by supporting:

  • Better sleep quality
  • Better daily energy
  • More stable mood
  • Improved motivation
  • Fewer sharp dips in energy that lead to snacking

When people have better energy, they often make better choices. They may be more likely to cook at home, exercise, and avoid overeating late at night. This is one reason BHRT is often seen as a support tool for weight management rather than a stand-alone answer (Hormones by Design, 2026).

The ChiroMed difference: a root-cause, integrative approach

At ChiroMed, BHRT should not be viewed as a single isolated treatment. It works best as part of a larger plan that addresses the reasons the body is struggling in the first place. That includes looking at hormones, nutrition, inflammation, insulin resistance, physical stress, sleep quality, pain, mobility, and lifestyle habits.

A multidisciplinary clinic can support this process by helping patients with:

  • Personalized nutrition plans
  • Functional medicine evaluation
  • Lab review and hormone assessment
  • Exercise and movement strategies
  • Sleep and stress support
  • Musculoskeletal care that helps patients move with less pain
  • Ongoing monitoring to make sure treatment stays safe and effective

This matters because pain and low function can also drive weight gain. A person with joint pain, spinal pain, low energy, and poor sleep may find it very hard to stay active and prepare healthy meals. An integrative chiropractic and functional medicine setting may help remove those barriers too. That is where ChiroMed’s whole-body approach can be especially valuable.

Clinical observations from Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, often emphasize that hormones, nutrition, inflammation, gut health, and musculoskeletal function are closely connected. His work regularly highlights the idea that long-term health improves when care addresses the full picture rather than only one symptom at a time. That approach supports the same message: BHRT works best when paired with smart nutrition, structured lifestyle support, and careful follow-up (Jimenez, 2025a; Jimenez, 2025b).

Safety matters: BHRT should be individualized

A balanced article on BHRT must also be clear about safety. Hormone therapy can be very helpful for the right patient, but it is not one-size-fits-all. A complete medical evaluation is important before starting treatment. Risk factors, symptoms, lab findings, age, health history, and treatment goals all matter.

Major medical groups support hormone therapy for the right patient, especially for symptom relief in menopause, but they also stress individualized decision-making. The Menopause Society states that hormone therapy remains the most effective treatment for vasomotor symptoms and other menopause-related concerns in appropriate patients, while also noting that treatment should be personalized (The Menopause Society, 2022).

It is also important to know that major organizations such as ACOG, the Endocrine Society, and the FDA caution against assuming that compounded bioidentical hormones are automatically safer or more effective than FDA-approved hormone therapies. They stress that patients should have informed discussions about the benefits, limits, and risks of treatment choices (ACOG, 2023; Endocrine Society, 2019; FDA, 2023).

Important points to remember:

  • BHRT is not a miracle cure
  • It should be prescribed and monitored carefully
  • It may improve how the body responds to diet and exercise
  • Results vary from person to person
  • Lifestyle habits still matter every day
  • Follow-up and lab review are essential

Final thoughts

Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy may help support weight management by improving the body’s internal environment. When hormone levels are optimized, some patients may notice better energy, fewer cravings, improved sleep, better body composition, and less resistance to healthy habits. Evexias and EvexiPEL promote this idea through steady hormone delivery and a broader functional wellness model.

At ChiroMed, this concept fits best within a root-cause, integrative strategy. BHRT is not about chasing quick weight loss. It is about helping the body function better so that healthy eating, movement, and lifestyle changes have a stronger effect. When BHRT is combined with fresh whole foods, reduced processed sugars, better sleep, and personalized clinical support, patients may be in a much better position to manage stubborn weight and improve lasting wellness from the inside out.


References

ACOG. (2023). Compounded Bioidentical Menopausal Hormone Therapy: ACOG Clinical Consensus No. 6. Obstetrics & Gynecology, 142(5), 1266-1273.

BodyLogicMD. (2023). Balancing Hormones for Weight Maintenance: The Role of BHRT.

Endocrine Society. (2019). Compounded Bioidentical Hormone Therapy.

EVEXIAS Health Solutions. (2026a). What Is EvexiPEL.

EVEXIAS Health Solutions. (2026b). What We Do.

FDA. (2023). Menopause.

Hormones by Design. (2026). How Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy Can Help You Lose Weight.

Jimenez, A. (2025a). Bioidentical Hormone Replacement Therapy: Part 1 Explained.

Jimenez, A. (2025b). Dr. Alexander Jimenez on Chiropractic Nutrition for Injury Recovery.

Pagdin Health. (2021). How to Eat Well When You’re on a Hormone Replacement Therapy Program.

Papadakis, G. E., et al. (2018). Menopausal Hormone Therapy Is Associated With Reduced Total and Visceral Adiposity: The OsteoLaus Cohort. The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 103(5), 1948-1957.

Rock Ridge Pharmacy. (2026). BHRT and Weight Loss: Does Hormone Balance Matter?.

The Menopause Society. (2022). 2022 Hormone Therapy Position Statement.

Regenerative Chiropractic Solutions for Joint Pain

Regenerative Chiropractic Solutions for Joint Pain

Regenerative Chiropractic Solutions for Joint Pain

Abstract

In this educational post, I share how I clinically evaluate and treat complex shoulder and knee conditions using a blend of integrative chiropractic care, functional medicine, and ultrasound-guided regenerative procedures. I walk you through my first-person clinical decision-making process, from identifying tendon and joint pathology to selecting precise injection targets, nerve blocks, and rehab strategies. I explain the physiological rationale behind each choice, how load and mobility interact with synovial, neural, and fascial systems, and why timing, dose, and technique matter. I also highlight how our multidisciplinary team collaborates: I, Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST, work closely with Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD (Board Certified in Internal Medicine; NPI #1164426749, Texas MD License #J2933), our Medical Director and Collaborative Physician at Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic) in El Paso, Texas. Together, we align chiropractic care, medical oversight, personal injury protocols, and rehabilitation to accelerate healing safely. Finally, I include practical insights, clinical pearls, and references to the latest research that guides our methods.

Introduction: How I Translate Research into Real-World Care

When I meet a patient with shoulder pain or a knee injury, my first objective is clarity. I use point-of-care ultrasound to visualize the tendons, joint capsule, labrum, bursae, articular cartilage, and neurovascular bundles while I perform functional movement tests to evaluate how these tissues behave under load. I integrate this with a comprehensive history, nutrition assessment, and injury mechanism analysis. This allows me to decide which structures truly drive the pain and dysfunction—and which ones are secondary.

My clinical workflow includes:

  • A functional movement screen: scapular control, rotator cuff strength, thoracic mobility, hip hinge mechanics, gait.
  • Ultrasound mapping: identifying footprints of tendon insertions, detecting partial-thickness tears, and distinguishing bursal vs intra-articular sources of inflammation.
  • Prioritization of care: starting with low-pain, high-impact interventions, progressing to targeted injections and then layered rehab.
  • Team-based oversight: integrating chiropractic adjustments, medical direction, and functional medicine, ensuring alignment with evidence-based approaches and regulatory standards.

At our clinic, I practice with the highest standards of safety and clinical governance. Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, with over 40 years in Internal Medicine, serves as our Medical Director and Collaborative Physician, ensuring our protocols—whether for PRP, perineural injections, or combined procedures—remain medically sound. This collaboration is the backbone of our integrative model.

Understanding Shoulder Anatomy in Motion: What I Look For

I start by scanning the shoulder to identify:

  • The humeral head and the articular cartilage (dark gray layer) integrity.
  • The supraspinatus footprint: looking for gaps, tendinosis, or partial tears, which often present as hypoechoic clefts, disrupted fibrillar patterns, or diminished tendon thickness.
  • The subscapularis: assessing its multi-bellied architecture and dynamic function, especially mid-subscapular fibers that stabilize anterior humeral head translation.
  • The biceps long-head tendon in the groove.
  • The subacromial-subdeltoid bursa: checking for effusion or thickening.
  • The acromioclavicular (AC) joint: cortical irregularities, osteophytes, joint space narrowing, synovitis.

Why this matters physiologically:

  • The rotator cuff centralizes the humeral head, reducing shear stress on the labrum and glenohumeral cartilage. Deficits in supraspinatus or subscapularis function allow microinstability, leading to synovial irritation and bursal distension.
  • The bursa responds to overload with inflammatory exudate; addressing mechanics and local inflammation together helps reduce nociceptive signaling.
  • The AC joint degeneration can refer pain anteriorly; treating it alongside cuff pathology improves overall biomechanics and reduces compensatory muscle guarding.

Ultrasound-Guided Mapping: My Step-by-Step Approach

Once I identify the structures, I mark precise points:

  • The suprascapular nerve region near the suprascapular notch (“U” configuration in ultrasound landmarks). I confirm the artery lateral to the nerve to avoid intravascular entry.
  • The supraspinatus footprint: where the tendon meets the greater tuberosity.
  • The subscapularis tendon: in a cross-sectional view, ensuring mid-subscap targeting for tendinopathic regions.
  • The AC joint line for out-of-plane injections when indicated.
  • The biceps groove for sheath or tendon interventions when synovitis or tenosynovitis is present.

These marks streamline my procedures, minimizing time, discomfort, and the need for repositioning. I verify probe orientation, depth, and angle (often 45 degrees, depending on target), and I confirm needle visualization in-plane or out-of-plane to see the echogenic tip, hydrodissection spread, and accurate intratendinous placement when appropriate.

Rationale for Nerve Blocks and Periarticular Techniques

For patients undergoing multiple shoulder targets, I integrate regional blocks to improve comfort and allow me to address several pain generators in one session:

  • Suprascapular nerve block: reduces posterior-superior shoulder pain and modulates nociception from the supraspinatus and infraspinatus regions. Mechanistically, it dampens afferent signaling to the dorsal horn, reducing central sensitization and allowing more effective rehabilitative efforts.
  • Selective infiltration of the AC joint: when symptomatic degeneration contributes to superior shoulder pain. A small-volume injection can disrupt local inflammatory cytokine cascades (e.g., IL-1β, TNF-α) while we correct movement patterns.

I favor low-volume, precisely placed injections guided by ultrasound rather than blind or high-volume approaches. Why? Smaller volumes reduce extravasation into non-target tissues, limit post-injection flare, and yield cleaner clinical signals—patients feel the change where it matters, and we can better assess outcome trajectories.

Integrative Chiropractic Care: How I Sequence Manual Therapy and Rehab

Chiropractic care is central in our model. My role includes:

  • Thoracic spine mobilization and manipulation: Restoring thoracic extension improves posterior tilt and upward rotation of the scapula, reducing subacromial compression.
  • Cervical segment assessment: Addressing hypomobility diminishes trapezius over-recruitment and vagal tone disruption tied to chronic pain.
  • Scapular kinematics retraining: Correcting scapulohumeral rhythm, serratus anterior activation, and lower trapezius facilitation reduces cuff overload.
  • Closed-chain shoulder stability drills: These build proprioception, improve rotator cuff co-contraction, and reduce humeral head translation.

I pair these with functional medicine: anti-inflammatory nutrition, glycemic control, gut integrity (since systemic inflammation heightens pain sensitivity), and sleep optimization. In my clinical observation and writing, I emphasize how lifestyle medicine potentiates tissue repair, as detailed in my professional updates and case reflections available on my clinic site and LinkedIn profile (Jimenez, n.d.-a; Jimenez, n.d.-b).

Regenerative Procedures: When and Why I Choose Them

For tendinopathy or partial tears, I often consider platelet-rich plasma (PRP) or biologic injectates based on:

  • Tissue state: hypoechoic tendinosis vs. focal fiber disruption. PRP’s growth factors (PDGF, TGF-β, VEGF) can upregulate tenocyte proliferation, collagen I synthesis, and angiogenesis that matures toward ligament/tendon phenotype.
  • Chronicity: long-standing degenerative changes respond better to intratendon fenestration plus PRP, as controlled microtrauma recruits local macrophage and fibroblast activity before growth-factor signaling directs organized repair.
  • Pain profile: If pain inhibits functional restoration, a targeted block first, then PRP, often results in smoother rehabilitation.

For intra-articular synovitis or cartilage degeneration, I align injectate choice with evidence, patient goals, and contraindications. I focus on improving joint lubrication and downregulating inflammatory cascades, while coaching load management and progressive exercise.

Procedural Pearls: Technique, Dose, and Safety

  • I color-code syringes and needles to avoid confusion during multi-target procedures. This improves focus and reduces the risk of mixing injectates.
  • I remove all air from systems to prevent acoustic shadowing on ultrasound and ensure accurate visualization.
  • I prefer to treat posterior structures first (lower discomfort) and proceed to more tender areas later; patients tolerate the session better and trust the process.
  • I inject in small aliquots, constantly adjusting needle tip position to confirm accurate dispersal and avoid coalescent boluses that may track away from target tissues.

Clinical Sequence Example: Shoulder Session

  • I begin by confirming suprascapular nerve and artery positions near the notch. If I plan a block, I deposit a small volume, visualizing spread around the nerve without intraneural injection.
  • I scan the supraspinatus footprint. If there’s a gap suggesting a partial tear, I perform intratendinous fenestration under ultrasound guidance and then deliver PRP precisely into the affected fibers.
  • I evaluate the subscapularis in cross-section. If the mid-subscapular fibers show degenerative changes, I target them specifically, avoiding bursal or intramuscular spread.
  • If AC joint degeneration is present and symptomatic, I use an out-of-plane approach to the center of the joint line, delivering a small volume to reduce synovitis.
  • I reassess bursal distension; if present, I minimize irritation with low-volume hydrodissection adjacent to the bursa rather than into it, depending on findings.
  • I finish with education, movement cues, and a plan for graded reloading.

Physiological Rationale: Why Movement and Load Matter

Tendons adapt to graded mechanical load by upregulating collagen production and aligning fibers along stress lines. However, excessive or chaotic loading increases matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity, disorganizes collagen, and promotes neovascularization with nociceptive nerve ingrowth. Our approach:

  • Reduces inflammatory drivers via precision injections and nutrition (omega-3 fatty acids, polyphenols, sufficient protein to support collagen synthesis).
  • Normalizes joint mechanics with chiropractic adjustments and scapular motor control training, decreasing subacromial pressure.
  • Progresses load in a temporal sequence that respects healing stages: early isometrics (pain inhibition), mid-phase eccentrics (collagen remodeling), late-phase heavy-slow resistance (functional resilience).

Team Integration: How Dr. Cardenas Directs Care

Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, oversees medical protocols at our clinic. Her role includes:

  • Reviewing patient histories and comorbidities (e.g., diabetes, autoimmune conditions) to adjust regenerative and pharmaceutical choices.
  • Ensuring best practices for sterile technique, adverse event management, and imaging-guided safety standards.
  • Coordinating personal injury documentation, medico-legal clarity, and post-procedure follow-up schedules.
  • Aligning interprofessional pathways: chiropractic care, physical therapy, functional medicine, and rehabilitation operate in a synchronized, patient-centered plan.

In multidisciplinary settings like ours, the MD provides medical direction while the chiropractor delivers manual and functional care. This blend is common in integrative and injury care clinics and improves patient outcomes by addressing the full biopsychosocial spectrum.

Rehabilitation Integration: From Bird Dog to Rotator Cuff Resilience

I often use a superset format, pairing exercises such as:

  • Bird dog and thoracic extension drills: building trunk stability and scapular control, enhancing kinetic chain flow to the shoulder.
  • Isometric external rotation at various angles: pain modulation and rotator cuff activation without aggravating pathology.
  • Closed-chain humeral head control: wall slides with serratus emphasis, scapular clocks, and low-angle presses.
  • Gradual return to sport-specific patterns: punching mechanics for boxers or overhead patterns for throwers, always respecting tissue thresholds.

The physiological underpinning:

  • Isometrics produce analgesic effects via cortical and spinal mechanisms.
  • Eccentrics increase tendon stiffness and organize collagen.
  • Closed-chain tasks improve proprioception and reduce humeral head translation by engaging cuff and scapular stabilizers synergistically.

Knee Care: Intra-articular, MCL, and Meniscus Strategy

For the knee, my evaluation centers on:

  • Intra-articular synovitis: visualization of effusion and synovial hypertrophy.
  • Medial collateral ligament (MCL): fiber integrity; partial-thickness sprains are common in valgus-load incidents.
  • Medial meniscus: posterior horn tears or degenerative fraying, seen as hypoechoic clefts or irregular margins on ultrasound and confirmed with clinical tests.

Treatment pathways:

  • Intra-articular injections: to modulate inflammation and improve lubrication. The aim is to reduce synovial pain and permit neuromuscular retraining.
  • MCL: targeted periligamentous injections for pain modulation plus progressive load—early isometrics, then controlled valgus-resistant strengthening.
  • Meniscus: when appropriate, perimeniscal injections combined with offloading strategies and progressive strengthening. For post-synovectomy patients, we structure rehab to manage swelling while restoring range and motor control.

Chiropractic and Rehab for the Knee:

  • Pelvic and lumbar alignment: improves femoral tracking and knee mechanics.
  • Hip external rotator strengthening: reduces medial knee stress and valgus collapse.
  • Foot and ankle assessment: pronation control affects tibial rotation and meniscal stress.

Safety, Comfort, and Patient Communication

I create a calm environment. I explain each step. I let the patient know what the sensation might be and why it matters. I ensure they understand that small, precise volumes and patient-friendly positioning minimize discomfort. If we use a block, I time it so tender targets are treated when pain is well controlled. I monitor the spread in real time on ultrasound—bright hypoechoic fluid hydrodissecting along fascial planes is my visual confirmation.

Post-Procedure Recovery and Timeline

Based on the content creation date (2026-05-03 14:53:08), here is how I typically structure recovery in the days ahead:

  • 2026-05-03 to 2026-05-05: Relative rest, supported motion, isometric drills at pain-free ranges. Avoid aggressive loading. Focus on sleep, hydration, and anti-inflammatory nutrition.
  • 2026-05-06 to 2026-05-10: Introduce gentle eccentrics for the shoulder (if cuff treated) and controlled closed-chain tasks. For the knee, begin hip-dominant strengthening and proprioceptive work.
  • 2026-05-11 onward: Progress load based on tolerance and tissue response. We reassess with ultrasound and functional tests to confirm healing trajectory before resuming high-demand activities.

Functional Medicine: Nutrition and Recovery

I layer functional medicine into the plan:

  • Protein: sufficient intake to meet collagen synthesis needs (generally 1.2–1.6 g/kg/day depending on case).
  • Omega-3 fatty acids: EPA/DHA to support anti-inflammatory signaling.
  • Polyphenols: curcumin, quercetin (as tolerated), and green tea extract for cytokine modulation.
  • Micronutrients: vitamin D, magnesium, zinc to support tissue repair and neuromuscular function.
  • Glycemic control: maintaining insulin sensitivity supports tendon and ligament healing.
  • Sleep and stress management: autonomic balance affects pain perception and tissue recovery.

Personal Injury Care and Documentation

In personal injury cases, clear documentation is essential. We:

  • Record ultrasound findings and procedural details meticulously.
  • Align care timelines with medico-legal requirements.
  • Provide functional capacity updates and safe return-to-work recommendations.
  • Coordinate imaging, labs, and specialist referrals under Dr. Cardenas’s medical direction.

Why this integrative model works:

  • It merges precision diagnostics, manual care, rehab science, and medical oversight.
  • It respects the biology of healing while addressing the mechanical drivers of pain.
  • It delivers the right intervention at the right time—neither under-treating nor overloading.

Practical Takeaways for Patients and Clinicians

  • Targeted, ultrasound-guided injections provide clarity and control; use small volumes and watch the spread.
  • Integrate chiropractic adjustments to normalize spinal and scapular mechanics; this reduces shoulder load.
  • Use graded loading: start with isometrics, move to eccentrics, then heavy-slow resistance.
  • Support physiology with nutrition, sleep, and stress regulation; these accelerate tissue repair.
  • Collaborate: MD oversight and interdisciplinary coordination make complex care safer and more effective.

Our Collaborative Team in El Paso

At Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic), our team-based model centers on the patient:

  • I, Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST, lead integrative chiropractic and functional medicine care, performing ultrasound-guided procedures and directing rehabilitative sequencing.
  • Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD (Internal Medicine; NPI #1164426749; Texas MD License #J2933) serves as Medical Director and Collaborative Physician, ensuring protocols adhere to medical standards, coordinating personal injury processes, and guiding complex case management.

If you are navigating shoulder or knee pain, our approach unites precision with compassion, science with practical wisdom, and hands-on care with high-quality imaging. We meet you where you are, and we move forward—step by step—toward function, resilience, and confidence.


References

  • Jimenez, A. (n.d.-a). Injury Medical & Functional Medicine Clinic. ChiroMed. https://chiromed.com/
  • Jimenez, A. (n.d.-b). Dr. Alex Jimenez LinkedIn profile. LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/in/dralexjimenez/
  • Kukkonen, J., Joukainen, A., Lehtinen, J., Mattila, K. T., Tuominen, E. K. J., Kauko, T., & Äärimaa, V. (2015). Treatment of non-traumatic rotator cuff tears: A randomised controlled trial with one-year clinical results. Bone & Joint Journal. https://doi.org/10.1302/0301-620X.97B12.35653
  • Khan, K. M., Cook, J. L., Kannus, P., Maffulli, N., & Bonar, S. F. (2002). Time to abandon the “tendinitis” myth. BMJ. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.324.7338.626
  • Fitzpatrick, J., Bulsara, M. K., & Zheng, M. H. (2017). The effectiveness of platelet-rich plasma in the treatment of tendinopathy: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled clinical trials. American Journal of Sports Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1177/0363546516643716
  • Lin, M. T., Wei, K. C., & Chang, K. V. (2019). Ultrasound-guided suprascapular nerve block for shoulder pain: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Pain Physician. https://www.painphysicianjournal.com/
  • Cumpston, M., McKenzie, J. E., et al. (2019). PRISMA checklist for systematic reviews: Recommendations. BMJ. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.l4895
  • Vaishya, R., Agarwal, A. K., & Azizi, A. T. (2016). PRP for knee osteoarthritis: Mechanisms and evidence. Journal of Clinical Orthopaedics and Trauma. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcot.2016.03.001
  • Lewis, J. S. (2016). Rotator cuff-related shoulder pain: Assessment, management and uncertainties. Manual Therapy. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2016.05.015
  • Coombes, B. K., Bisset, L., & Vicenzino, B. (2015). Eccentric exercise for tendinopathies: Clinical reasoning and dosage. British Journal of Sports Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2014-094227

El Paso Teen Driver Risks During the 100 Deadliest Days

El Paso Teen Driver Risks During the 100 Deadliest Days

El Paso Teen Driver Risks During the 100 Deadliest Days

The “100 Deadliest Days” are the summer days between Memorial Day and Labor Day. This period is known for a higher risk of fatal crashes involving teen drivers. In El Paso, Texas, this is an important safety topic because summer brings more driving, more travel, more late nights, and more young drivers on the road.

This does not mean every teen driver is careless. It means summer creates more risk. School is out. Daily routines change. Teen drivers may be going to work, sports, family events, gyms, social gatherings, or short road trips. In a city like El Paso, that can mean driving on I-10, Loop 375, Montana Avenue, Mesa Street, Zaragoza Road, or long routes toward New Mexico and nearby communities.

AAA reports that more than 30% of deaths in crashes involving teen drivers from 2019 to 2023 happened during the summer period between Memorial Day and Labor Day (AAA Newsroom, 2025). That is why families, parents, clinics, and local communities must treat these months as a time for prevention and preparation.

At ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine in El Paso, the focus is not only on what happens after a crash. The goal is also education, prevention, early evaluation, and whole-person recovery when an accident does occur.

Why the 100 Deadliest Days Matter in El Paso

Teen drivers are still learning how to handle real road problems. They may know the rules, but they may not have enough experience with sudden stops, distracted drivers, road construction, heavy traffic, aggressive driving, tire problems, heat, dust, or nighttime driving.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention explains that teen crash risk is linked to inexperience, driving at night, teen passengers, speeding, alcohol use, distracted driving, and not wearing a seat belt (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], 2025).

In El Paso, summer can add even more risk because of:

  • Extreme heat
  • Longer daylight hours
  • More family travel
  • More late-night driving
  • Busy holiday weekends
  • Road trips across Texas and New Mexico
  • More teen passengers in vehicles
  • More distracted driving from phones and social media

Local El Paso reporting has also warned about the risks of summer drinking and driving during the 100 Deadliest Days, especially when people attend parties, cookouts, celebrations, and late-night events (KVIA, 2024).

Common Teen Driving Risks During Summer

Most crashes do not happen because of one mistake. Often, several small risks happen at the same time. A teen may be tired, driving too fast, carrying friends, and looking at a phone. Together, those risks can quickly become dangerous.

Common risk factors include:

  • Distracted driving: Texting, checking alerts, changing music, using maps, or recording videos while driving.
  • Too many passengers: Friends can create noise, pressure, and distraction.
  • Night driving: Darkness, fatigue, and impaired drivers make the road more dangerous.
  • Speeding: Higher speeds give drivers less time to react.
  • No seat belt: A seat belt is one of the best ways to reduce the risk of serious injury.
  • Alcohol or drug use: Even a small amount can affect reaction time and judgment.
  • Inexperience: New drivers may not notice danger early enough to avoid a crash.

The National Road Safety Foundation encourages families to turn the “100 Deadliest Days” into the “100 Safest Days of Summer” through safe driving habits, parent involvement, and clear expectations (National Road Safety Foundation, n.d.).

Texas Teen Driving Rules Families Should Know

Texas has rules for teen drivers because these limits can help reduce risk. The Texas Department of Public Safety explains that teen provisional drivers may not drive with more than one passenger under 21 who is not a family member. They also may not drive between midnight and 5:00 a.m. unless it is for work, school activities, or an emergency. Cell phone use is also prohibited, including hands-free use, unless it is an emergency (Texas Department of Public Safety, 2024).

These rules can help parents build a simple family driving plan.

A Simple Summer Driving Plan for Families

Parents do not need to scare teens to help them drive safely. Clear rules are better. The rules should be simple, repeated, and followed every time.

Before a teen leaves home, families can review these safety steps:

  • Buckle up before the car moves.
  • Put the phone away.
  • Do not text, scroll, record, or answer calls while driving.
  • Limit passengers.
  • Avoid late-night driving when possible.
  • Map the route before leaving.
  • Check fuel, tires, lights, and fluids before long drives.
  • Never ride with someone who has been drinking or using drugs.
  • Call for a safe ride instead of taking a risk.
  • Slow down in traffic, construction, rain, dust, or heat.

A written driving agreement can help. It can list the rules, the consequences, and the family promise that safety comes first. A teen should know that calling for help is always better than making a dangerous choice.

Why Route Planning Matters in El Paso

El Paso drivers often deal with fast highways, busy intersections, construction zones, heat, and long travel distances. Planning the route before leaving can lower risk.

Before a teen drives, families can ask:

  • Where are you going?
  • What route will you take?
  • Will you be driving after dark?
  • Who will be in the vehicle?
  • Is there road construction on the route?
  • Do you know where to safely stop if needed?
  • Is the vehicle ready for the trip?
  • What time will you return?

Planning ahead also helps teens avoid making quick decisions while driving. This lowers distraction and stress.

What To Do After a Summer Car Accident

Even careful drivers can still be involved in a crash. If an accident happens, the first steps are important.

After a crash:

  • Check for injuries.
  • Call 911 if anyone is hurt or the crash blocks traffic.
  • Move to a safe area if possible.
  • Do not move someone with possible head, neck, or back trauma unless there is immediate danger.
  • Take photos of the vehicles, road, traffic signs, debris, and visible injuries.
  • Exchange information.
  • Get witness names and phone numbers.
  • Avoid admitting fault at the scene.
  • Get medical attention, even if pain seems mild.
  • Keep records of symptoms, treatment, missed work, missed activities, and expenses.

Many people feel “fine” right after a crash. This can happen because adrenaline may hide pain for a while. Later, the body may begin to feel stiffness, swelling, headaches, neck pain, back pain, shoulder pain, dizziness, numbness, tingling, fatigue, or trouble sleeping (Jimenez, n.d.-a).

Why Delayed Pain Should Be Taken Seriously

Crash injuries can affect the spine, muscles, joints, ligaments, discs, and nerves. The body may tighten up to protect itself. Over time, this can cause pain, stiffness, weakness, and limited range of motion.

Delayed symptoms may appear hours or days after the crash. This does not mean the injury is minor. It may mean the body is still reacting to trauma.

A post-accident evaluation may include:

  • Health history
  • Crash history
  • Pain and symptom review
  • Range-of-motion testing
  • Orthopedic testing
  • Neurological testing
  • Muscle strength testing
  • Posture and gait review
  • Imaging referral when needed
  • Functional review for work, daily activity, and driving

Early evaluation helps patients understand what is happening. It also helps create a clear medical record that connects the crash, symptoms, findings, and care plan.

ChiroMed’s Integrative Approach to Accident Recovery

ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine in El Paso uses a whole-person approach to care. This means the team looks beyond pain. They also consider movement, inflammation, strength, nutrition, stress, sleep, and daily function.

After a motor vehicle accident, this type of care may include:

  • Chiropractic care for spine and joint function
  • Rehabilitation exercises for strength and stability
  • Soft tissue care for muscle tension and guarding
  • Functional movement training
  • Nutrition counseling to support healing
  • Nurse practitioner services when medical review is needed
  • Naturopathy and wellness support
  • Acupuncture or complementary care when appropriate
  • Documentation for injury, insurance, or legal needs

This approach matters because car accident injuries are often both mechanical and systemic. The neck, back, shoulders, hips, and extremities may be injured. At the same time, the body may be dealing with inflammation, stress hormones, poor sleep, pain, reduced activity, and anxiety after the crash.

Mechanical Stress and Biochemical Stress After a Crash

A crash can create two major types of stress in the body.

Mechanical stress affects the body’s structure. This may include:

  • Whiplash
  • Neck strain
  • Back strain
  • Joint irritation
  • Disc irritation
  • Muscle spasm
  • Ligament sprain
  • Nerve irritation
  • Headaches from neck trauma

Biochemical stress affects how the body responds internally. This may include:

  • Inflammation
  • Poor sleep
  • Fatigue
  • Stress response
  • Muscle guarding
  • Changes in appetite
  • Slower recovery
  • Increased pain sensitivity

ChiroMed’s integrated model is designed to look at both sides. Chiropractic care and rehabilitation help with movement and structure. Functional medicine, nutrition, and medical oversight can help support the body’s healing environment.

The Role of Dr. Alex Jimenez at ChiroMed

Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, brings a dual clinical background as a chiropractor and board-certified family nurse practitioner. His clinical observations often focus on how car accidents can cause spinal pain, delayed symptoms, nerve irritation, headaches, soft tissue injury, and movement problems.

This dual perspective is important in personal injury care. A patient may need a biomechanical exam to assess spinal motion, soft-tissue strain, posture, and joint function. The same patient may also need medical awareness related to inflammation, medications, chronic conditions, imaging needs, or referral decisions.

At ChiroMed, this type of care supports a more complete view of the patient. The goal is not just to reduce pain for a few days. The goal is to help the patient recover movement, strength, stability, and daily function.

The Role of Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD

Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, Board Certified in Internal Medicine, serves as Medical Director and Collaborative Physician at Injury Medical Clinic PA, also known as Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic, in El Paso, Texas. Practice materials list her NPI as #1164426749 and Texas MD License #J2933. With over 40 years of experience as an internist, Dr. Cardenas provides medical direction in a multidisciplinary injury care setting (Jimenez, n.d.-c).

This type of setup is common in integrative and personal injury clinics. A medical doctor may provide medical oversight, while a chiropractor focuses on spinal, joint, and soft-tissue care, as well as rehabilitation. When these roles work together, patients can receive broader support.

This team-based model may include:

  • Chiropractic evaluation and treatment
  • Internal medicine oversight
  • Functional medicine support
  • Personal injury care planning
  • Rehabilitation services
  • Nutritional support
  • Referral coordination
  • Documentation for insurance or legal review

For car accident patients, this helps connect care across different needs. A patient may have neck pain, back pain, headaches, muscle tension, sleep problems, and functional limits. A multidisciplinary team can help organize the care plan and monitor progress.

Why Documentation Matters After a Teen Driver Crash

After a crash, treatment is important. Documentation is also important. Insurance companies and legal teams often review medical records closely. Clear records can help explain the injury, the symptoms, the findings, and the reason for treatment.

Helpful documentation may include:

  • Crash details
  • Date symptoms began
  • Pain levels
  • Physical exam findings
  • Range-of-motion limits
  • Orthopedic and neurological findings
  • Imaging results when needed
  • Diagnoses
  • Treatment plan
  • Progress notes
  • Work, school, driving, or activity limits
  • Final recovery or discharge notes

Good documentation does not guarantee a legal outcome. However, it can help show a clear timeline between the crash and the patient’s injuries.

Prevention and Recovery Work Together

The best accident care starts before a crash ever happens. Families can lower risk by setting rules, limiting distractions, checking vehicles, and keeping open communication with teen drivers.

But if a crash does happen, early care matters. Waiting too long can allow pain, stiffness, weakness, and poor movement patterns to become worse.

A safer summer plan includes:

  • Clear driving rules
  • Seat belt use every ride
  • No phone use while driving
  • Passenger limits
  • Route planning
  • Avoiding late-night driving
  • Early evaluation after a crash
  • Integrated care when symptoms appear
  • Strong documentation when injuries are present

A Safer Summer for El Paso Families

The 100 Deadliest Days are a serious warning, but they are also a chance to act. Parents, teens, and families can work together to make summer driving safer.

In El Paso, safe driving means more than following traffic laws. It means planning ahead, reducing distractions, respecting the risks of heat and late-night driving, and knowing what to do after a crash.

At ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine, the mission is to support safer, healthier families through education, chiropractic care, rehabilitation, functional medicine, and coordinated injury recovery. When prevention and early care work together, families have a better chance of staying safe, healing well, and returning to normal life after an accident.


References

AAA Newsroom. (2025, May 29). The 100 Deadliest Days: Teen driver deaths jump in summer months.

AAA Texas. (2025, May 29). The 100 Deadliest Days: Teen driver deaths jump in summer months.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2025). Risk factors for teen drivers.

ChiroMed. (n.d.-a). Integrated medicine holistic healthcare in El Paso, TX.

ChiroMed. (n.d.-b). Integrated medicine services El Paso, TX.

ChiroMed. (n.d.-c). Contact us.

Jimenez, A. (n.d.-a). Delayed car accident pain and integrative recovery guide.

Jimenez, A. (n.d.-b). El Paso, TX chiropractor Dr. Alex Jimenez DC.

Jimenez, A. (n.d.-c). Dr. Maria Cardenas, MD: Board-certified internal medicine specialist.

KVIA. (2024, May 30). 100 Deadliest Days: Staying safe while drinking this summer.

National Road Safety Foundation. (n.d.). 100 Safest Days of Summer.

Reyna Law Firm. (2025, June 16). Why car accidents spike during summer in Texas and New Mexico.

Texas Department of Public Safety. (2024). Texas provisional license as a teen.

Chiropractic & Laser Therapy for Spine & Joint Pain Relief

Chiropractic & Laser Therapy for Spine & Joint Pain Relief

Chiropractic & Laser Therapy for Spine & Joint Pain Relief

Abstract

In this comprehensive educational post, I present a clear, step-by-step overview of how modern, robot-assisted and handheld multimode laser therapy fits within an integrative chiropractic and functional medicine framework for spine and joint pain. I explain patient positioning, energy-density dosing, safety considerations, and the clinical reasoning behind acute and chronic treatment protocols. I also discuss how our multidisciplinary team at Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic) in El Paso, Texas integrates chiropractic care, internal medicine oversight, functional medicine, personal injury rehabilitation, and orthobiologics such as PRP. With medical direction from Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD (Board Certified in Internal Medicine; NPI #1164426749; Texas MD License #J2933) and collaborative protocols, we optimize outcomes using evidence-based methods, laser physics principles, mitochondrial support, and targeted rehabilitation pathways. Finally, I address practical questions about fracture timing, device durability, PRP timing, and how dose calibration by area improves care. This post summarizes current findings from leading researchers and reflects my clinical observations and protocols implemented in our clinic in alignment with modern literature.

Introduction: How Integrative Chiropractic Care and Internal Medicine Oversight Elevate Laser Therapy

I am Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST. In our clinic, Injury Medical Clinic PA (also known as Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic) in El Paso, Texas, we embrace a multidisciplinary care model that blends chiropractic biomechanical correction with medical oversight, functional medicine, rehabilitation, and orthobiologics. Our Medical Director and Collaborative Physician, Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, Board Certified in Internal Medicine (NPI #1164426749, Texas MD License #J2933), brings over 40 years of internal medicine experience to ensure safety, proper diagnosis, and evidence-based clinical governance.

  • The collaborative design:
    • Chiropractic care (Dr. Jimenez): biomechanical assessment, spinal and extremity adjustments, neuromuscular re-education, and movement-based rehabilitation.
    • Internal medicine oversight (Dr. Cardenas): diagnostic rigor, medication reconciliation, comorbidity management (e.g., diabetes, dyslipidemia, autoimmune disease), and risk mitigation.
    • Functional medicine: root-cause analysis, nutritional optimization, mitochondrial support, inflammation modulation, and gut-musculoskeletal axis considerations.
    • Personal injury and rehabilitation: staged care, objective outcome measures, return-to-function protocols.
    • Advanced modalities: multimode laser therapy (robotic and handheld), shockwave where appropriate, and adjunct orthobiologics (e.g., PRP) under medical guidance.

This integrated paradigm ensures that when we use laser therapy, we do so with precise dosing, physiological intent, and clear safety thresholds—all aligned with modern research and clinical practice guidelines.

Laser Therapy Fundamentals: Patient Comfort, Precision, and Protocols

When I deploy laser therapy in the clinic, I prioritize one principle above all: patient comfort and positional stability. If a robotic platform is used, the patient must be positioned to minimize movement to preserve targeting accuracy and energy-density delivery.

  • Positioning and contact:
    • Low back: face-down positioning enables direct skin contact, stable landmarks, and clear indexing over regions such as L4-L5 facets.
    • Handpiece contact vs. robotic distance: the handheld diode often requires direct skin contact for precise focal delivery, whereas the robot can be placed at a calibrated distance (e.g., approximately 6 inches) with a standardized ruler to maintain the proper focal plane.
  • Targeting workflow:
    • Identify primary symptom locus (e.g., right-sided facet-related stiffness or referred pain).
    • Zero the X and Y axes to center the robot’s field over the target.
    • Expand the X and Y to cover both the symptomatic region and adjacent connective tissues.
    • Use a clinical multimodal approach that treats the site of pain, the likely source, and surrounding fascial/intersegmental tissues.
  • Why comfort and stability matter:
    • Precision delivery of a prescribed energy density requires that the patient remain still; otherwise, the laser’s calibrated footprint won’t match the intended anatomical target.
    • Consistency in delivery improves reproducibility and patient outcomes while minimizing the risk of dosage variability.

The Science of Energy Density: Why Joules per Centimeter Squared Matters

Laser therapy dosing is best conceptualized in terms of energy density, measured in joules per square centimeter (J/cm²), rather than total joules. Modern literature and clinical consensus point to dosing windows, often in the range of 4–10 J/cm², for many musculoskeletal applications.

  • Key concept: energy density is the dose, not simply total energy. It accounts for the area treated, helping us avoid over- or under-delivery.
  • Typical dosing range: approximately 4–10 J/cm² for pain and inflammation modulation, with calibration adjusted to condition severity and tissue depth (World Association for Laser Therapy guidance and aligned literature).
  • Software calibration advantage: when we adjust the X-Y area, advanced systems automatically recalibrate treatment time to maintain the set J/cm². This prevents manual calculation errors and ensures consistent dosing across varied anatomical footprints.
  • Why not chase total joules alone? Focusing only on total joules can lead to treating either too large or too small an area without achieving the desired density. Energy density ensures that photonic energy per unit area reaches cellular targets at bioactive thresholds.

Pulse Technology, Thermal Behavior, and Safety

Modern high-peak-power lasers can deliver therapeutic energy without excessive surface heating by using very short pulse durations, paired wavelengths, and built-in rest periods for energy absorption.

  • Key technical points:
    • Peak power characteristics (e.g., 50 W pulse capability) allow deeper photon penetration within safe thermal limits when paired with proper wavelength selection.
    • Dual-wavelength strategies (e.g., 808 nm continuous or quasi-continuous and 905 nm pulsed) provide complementary tissue interactions. The pulsed approach reduces sustained thermal accumulation, allowing tissue absorption without overheating.
    • Thermal homeostasis: when tissue temperature remains stable over time, the device is delivering energy at the right pace and dose. Feeling surface heat during treatment often means wrong wavelengths, too much energy too fast, or insufficient pulsing.
    • Practical observation: patients may feel mild warmth or tingling; most do not experience significant sensations due to nanosecond pulse timing and photobiomodulation rather than thermal ablation.
  • Why pulse matters physiologically:
    • The mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) and chromophores (e.g., cytochrome c oxidase) respond to photons in specific wavelengths, increasing ATP production without requiring bulk heat.
    • Pulsing permits photon delivery that favors cellular signaling pathways (e.g., nitric oxide dissociation, improved microcirculation) while minimizing thermal overload.

Clinical Multimodal Strategy: Robot-Assisted and Handheld Synergy

Our protocols frequently use both robotic and handheld laser applications during the same session. The robot can deliver energy across a mapped region while the handheld tool targets trigger points, facet joints, or entheses with precision.

  • Synergistic workflow:
    • Robot: covers the broader symptomatic region with calibrated X-Y fields and appropriate energy density.
    • Handheld: addresses focal points such as knots (myofascial trigger points), joint spaces, and dynamic tissues during movement if needed.
    • Timing: handheld applications may be short (e.g., approximately 25 seconds per focal spot) and repeated across several points while the robot runs through a longer program (e.g., 6–12 minutes).
  • Why this pairing works:
    • Regional coverage addresses inflammatory mediators, edema, and fascial tightness.
    • Focal delivery modulates neuromuscular trigger points, reduces tone in hyperactive bands, and influences local perfusion.
    • Integrates well with chiropractic adjustments and rehab exercises to restore proper biomechanics, reduce pain, and improve tolerance to movement.

Acute vs. Chronic Protocols: Cumulative Effects and Scheduling

Laser therapy effects are cumulative. While some patients report improvement within hours, best outcomes arise from structured series.

  • Acute conditions:
    • Suggested initial series: approximately 6 treatments.
    • Frequency: at least 24 hours between sessions; practical cadence is often Monday-Wednesday-Friday.
    • Expected time course: noticeable improvements can occur after 1–3 treatments; reassess at 4–6 with functional tests.
  • Chronic conditions:
    • Suggested initial series: approximately 12 treatments.
    • Frequency: at least 24 hours between sessions; same practical three-per-week cadence.
    • Why complete the series: early improvement may tempt patients to stop prematurely. Completion ensures robust and durable changes in inflammatory signaling and mitochondrial dynamics.
  • Maintenance:
    • For degenerative or recurrent conditions (e.g., osteoarthritis, chronic tendinopathies), maintenance programs may be implemented after the initial series, tailored to flare patterns and functional goals.

Knee Osteoarthritis: Dosing, Positioning, and Patellar Considerations

For knee osteoarthritis, we consider joint geometry and energy reflection.

  • Positioning:
    • Avoid direct anterior-only shots on a fully extended knee due to patellar reflection.
    • Flexion can expose more joint surface area to effective photon delivery and reduce energy loss.
  • Compartment targeting:
    • Medial compartment disease is common; address medial, lateral, anterior (with flexion), and posterior approaches as needed.
    • Apply energy density per compartment rather than summing total joules across the knee. Calibrate each mapped area to its indicated J/cm² and allow software to adjust time automatically.
  • Outcomes:
    • Laser therapy can reduce pain and inflammation and improve function. It does not regenerate cartilage in bone-on-bone scenarios but frequently helps delay escalation to invasive intervention by improving symptom control and quality of life.

Fracture Considerations: Timing and Physiological Rationale

While soft tissue applications dominate the evidence base, clinicians have reported positive experiences with early laser use for fractures under certain conditions. We approach this area cautiously under the medical oversight of Dr. Cardenas.

  • Timing:
    • Anecdotally, early application within approximately 7–10 days may support the inflammatory phase, perfusion, and early healing signaling. This is approached on an off-label, case-by-case basis.
    • Non-union scenarios are complex and typically require broader interventions; laser may serve as an adjunct but not a standalone solution.
  • Rationale:
    • Early photobiomodulation may modulate inflammatory mediators, improve microcirculation, and influence osteoblastic activity through mitochondrial pathways, but evidence is heterogeneous and must be individualized under MD direction.

Orthobiologics Integration: Preparing the Soil for PRP and Beyond

Laser therapy and PRP can be paired strategically to optimize the injection environment, support post-injection recovery, and potentially improve outcomes.

  • Pre-injection priming:
    • Two to three laser sessions before PRP may enhance local perfusion, reduce maladaptive inflammation, and create a favorable milieu for cellular activity.
    • Day-of-injection: use settings that stabilize the local environment and support immediate post-procedural comfort.
  • Post-injection:
    • Approximately six sessions post-injection can support pain control, circulation, and mitochondrial activity during the early healing window without negating the desired pro-inflammatory cascade of PRP. Rather than suppressing inflammation, laser aims to modulate and guide it toward productive repair.
  • Protocols:
    • We use provider-driven, literature-informed protocols synchronized with orthobiologic timelines. Our internal medicine oversight ensures alignment with patient-specific comorbidities and medications.

Mitochondrial Optimization: From Photobiomodulation to Nutritional Support

Laser therapy enhances mitochondrial function through photobiomodulation—most notably by interacting with cytochrome c oxidase and modulating nitric oxide signaling. This translates into improved ATP generation, cellular resilience, and adaptive metabolism.

  • Mechanisms:
    • Photonic stimulation increases electron transport chain activity, ATP output, and reactive oxygen species signaling within physiological ranges that promote repair.
    • NO modulation can improve microvascular perfusion, reduce local hypoxia, and facilitate nutrient delivery.
  • Adjunct strategies (functional medicine):
    • When appropriate and safe, we consider mitochondrial support, including CoQ10, NAD+ precursors, creatine, and targeted micronutrients. We also address lifestyle factors (glycemic control, sleep, movement).
    • Pharmacologic interactions: statins and certain medications can negatively influence mitochondrial function. Dr. Cardenas oversees medication reconciliation and counsels patients on safe optimization strategies, ensuring contraindicated changes are avoided without medical approval.
  • Why this integrative approach works:
    • Combining photobiomodulation with metabolic support and biomechanical correction ensures that increased ATP production is matched by improved movement patterns and tissue loading. This reduces relapse and drives functional restoration.

Real-Time Dose Visualization and Practical Tips

Modern robotic systems allow visualization of the active treatment area. For example, a visible triangle may reflect the 808 nm component, while pulsed wavelengths (e.g., 905 nm) might not be captured by smartphone cameras due to pulse characteristics.

  • Practical pearls:
    • Use visual guides to confirm alignment with the symptomatic region.
    • Employ rulers and standardized spacing to maintain correct focal distances.
    • Communicate sensations: patients may feel mild warmth or tingling; reassure based on normal pulse technology effects and verify comfort throughout.

Avoiding Bioinhibition: The Arndt-Schulz Law and Distributed Coverage

Photobiomodulation follows dose-response principles. Too little energy yields no effect; too much can inhibit cellular function.

  • Strategy:
    • Stay within recommended energy density ranges.
    • If extending treatment time, distribute coverage rather than stacking excessive energy on a single point.
    • Consider anterior-posterior or medial-lateral mapping for joints to spread dose and maintain optimal cellular stimulation.

Device Reliability, Service, and Clinical Deployment

Clinics often ask about durability and support. Field-service models and on-site training help ensure consistent operation. Our protocols leverage both robot-assisted and handheld applications to deliver comprehensive care.

  • Reliability:
    • Robust installation and service support minimize downtime.
    • On-site maintenance reduces risks associated with shipping sensitive devices.
  • Training:
    • Structured onboarding allows staff to apply evidence-based protocols safely and consistently, freeing clinicians to focus on assessment, high-level planning, and patient counseling.

Integrating Chiropractic Care Within the Laser Framework

Chiropractic care is foundational to our musculoskeletal program. Laser therapy complements adjustments and rehabilitation by modulating pain, inflammation, and tissue readiness.

  • Chiropractic integration:
    • Adjustments restore segmental motion and reduce mechanical stress on involved joints and soft tissues.
    • Laser therapy calms nociceptive input, improves circulation, and enhances mitochondrial function—creating an environment where adjustments and exercises yield greater benefits.
    • Rehabilitation includes core stabilization, proprioception training, fascial mobility, and progressive loading tailored to the patient’s condition and response to laser and manual therapies.
  • Personal injury care:
    • Objective measures (pain scales, ROM tests, functional outcomes) track progress across laser sessions and chiropractic care stages.
    • MD oversight ensures that red flags (e.g., neurologic deficits, systemic issues) are addressed promptly.

Clinical Observations and Practice Insights

In my practice, I have observed that:

  • Patients with facet-mediated low back pain experience notable symptom relief when laser is combined with targeted adjustments and trunk stabilization. The early window of improvement often emerges 4–6 hours post-treatment and compounds over multiple sessions.
  • For knee osteoarthritis, flexed positioning and compartment-specific mapping improve comfort and functional outcomes, especially when combined with weight management, gait training, and anti-inflammatory nutrition.
  • Trigger point therapy using a handheld laser, followed by myofascial release and corrective exercises, accelerates pain reduction and increases carryover from chiropractic sessions.

Evidence-Based Context and Citations

Modern literature has clarified the importance of energy density and photobiomodulation parameters in musculoskeletal care. The World Association for Laser Therapy and multiple peer-reviewed studies support dosing in the 4–10 J/cm² range for many applications. Dual-wavelength pulse strategies and the Arndt-Schulz law inform our therapeutic windows, while clinical protocols integrate PRP timing to harness synergistic benefits rather than suppress important pro-inflammatory steps.

  • Energy density and dose-response:
    • Targeting J/cm² is more predictive of outcomes than chasing total joules alone (WALT guidance; see references).
    • Avoiding bioinhibition by staying within optimal ranges ensures cellular stimulation rather than suppression.
  • PRP integration:
    • Priming and post-injection laser protocols can improve patient comfort, functional recovery, and overall outcomes without negating PRP’s inflammatory phase. The art is in timing, settings, and patient-specific calibration, coordinated under MD oversight.

How We Operationalize Care in Our Clinic

  • Intake and diagnosis:
    • Comprehensive evaluation with imaging when indicated, medication review, and metabolic and inflammatory markers.
  • Plan formation:
    • Chiropractic adjustment plan, laser mapping, energy-density targets, rehab progression, and functional-medicine support.
  • Execution:
    • Robotic laser for regional coverage, handheld for focal points, three-per-week cadence for chronic care, reassessment at defined milestones.
  • Safety and quality:
    • Continuous monitoring, MD oversight for complex cases, patient reporting of sensations and functional tests, and tight dose control using automated area-time recalibration.

Why This Matters for Patients

Patients benefit from care that is comfortable, precise, and backed by research. Our integrated approach reduces pain without relying solely on medications, promotes natural tissue recovery, and aligns with personal injury recovery timelines and functional goals. While laser therapy is not a structural cure for severe degenerative changes (e.g., bone-on-bone), it can meaningfully improve quality of life, extend the window for conservative management, and enhance the benefits of chiropractic and rehabilitation.

Key Takeaways

  • Focus on energy density (J/cm²), not just total joules.
  • Use pulse technology to deliver high-peak power safely without overheating tissue.
  • Combine robotic regional coverage with handheld focal targeting for comprehensive care.
  • Follow a structured series: approximately 6 treatments for acute, 12 for chronic; effects are cumulative.
  • Integrate chiropractic, functional medicine, internal medicine oversight, and rehabilitation to maximize outcomes.
  • Pair laser with orthobiologics using evidence-informed timing to augment repair rather than suppress beneficial inflammation.
  • Maintain patient comfort and stability for accurate dosing and reproducible results.

References

  • World Association for Laser Therapy (WALT). (2010). Guidelines for Laser Therapy Dose Recommendations. https://waltza.co.za/documentation/guidelines
  • Hamblin, M. R. (2017). Mechanisms and applications of the anti-inflammatory effects of photobiomodulation. AIMS Biophysics, 4(3), 337–361. https://www.aimspress.com/article/doi/10.3934/biophy.2017.3.337
  • Chow, R. T., Johnson, M. I., Lopes-Martins, R. A. B., & Bjordal, J. M. (2009). Efficacy of low-level laser therapy in the management of neck pain: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized placebo or active-treatment controlled clinical trials. Lancet, 374(9705), 1897–1908. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(09)61522-1
  • Bjordal, J. M., Couppe, C., Chow, R. T., Tuner, J., & Ljunggren, E. A. (2003). A systematic review of low-level laser therapy with location-specific doses for pain and disability in knee osteoarthritis. Photomedicine and Laser Surgery, 21(5), 241–245. https://doi.org/10.1089/pho.2003.21.241
  • Rojas, J. C., & Gonzalez-Lima, F. (2011). Low-level light therapy of the eye and brain. Eye and Brain, 3, 49–67. https://doi.org/10.2147/EB.S21390
  • Hashmi, J. T., Huang, Y.-Y., Sharma, S. K., Kurup, D. B., De Taboada, L., Carroll, J. D., & Hamblin, M. R. (2010). Effect of pulsing in low-level light therapy. Lasers in Surgery and Medicine, 42(6), 450–466. https://doi.org/10.1002/lsm.20954

Heat Waves and Car Accidents: El Paso Safety Guide

Heat Waves and Car Accidents: El Paso Safety Guide

Heat Waves and Car Accidents: El Paso Safety Guide

Extreme Heat Is More Than a Summer Problem

El Paso summers can be beautiful, but they can also be dangerous for drivers. Extreme heat does not only make people uncomfortable. It can also increase the risk of motor vehicle accidents. Scientific studies and safety reports show that hotter days and heat waves can raise the chance of crashes, injuries, and even fatal accidents.

This happens because heat affects three things at once:

  • The driver
  • The vehicle
  • The road environment

When a driver is tired, dehydrated, or distracted by the heat, reaction time can slow down. When a vehicle is overheated or poorly maintained, tires, batteries, brakes, and engines may fail. When the road is hot, crowded, bright, or under construction, the driving environment becomes harder to manage.

In El Paso, TX, where high temperatures can last for many weeks, drivers should treat summer heat as a real safety risk.

How Heat Increases the Risk of Car Accidents

Extreme heat can make driving more dangerous in several ways. Studies have found that high temperatures are associated with increased crash risk, especially on very hot days and during heat waves (Hsu, 2026; Gu et al., 2025). Heat can also make crashes more severe because drivers may react more slowly or make unsafe choices when they are tired or dehydrated.

Hot weather can affect drivers by causing:

  • Fatigue
  • Dehydration
  • Headaches
  • Dizziness
  • Blurry focus
  • Irritability
  • Slower reaction time
  • Poor decision-making

Heat can also affect vehicles. Tires may be more likely to fail when they are underinflated, worn down, or exposed to hot pavement. Engines can overheat. Batteries can weaken. Air conditioning systems can fail. Any of these problems can cause a driver to lose control, stop suddenly, or become stranded in dangerous traffic conditions (Jim Adler & Associates, 2025; Martinez Law Office, 2024).

This is why summer driving safety is not just about paying attention. It is also about preparing the body and the vehicle before getting on the road.

Why El Paso Drivers Should Be Extra Careful

El Paso drivers often deal with long stretches of intense sun, heavy traffic, dry heat, and hot roads. Busy areas such as I-10, Loop 375, Mesa, Montana, Zaragoza, and the East Side can become stressful during peak heat hours. When traffic slows down, the heat inside and outside the vehicle can build quickly.

Even a short drive can become risky if the driver is tired, thirsty, or overheated. A parked vehicle can also become dangerously hot in a short time. This can place children, older adults, pets, medications, and medical supplies at risk. Safety agencies warn that vehicles can heat up quickly, even with a window cracked (National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, n.d.).

For El Paso families, workers, students, veterans, and commuters, summer road safety should be part of daily planning.

Warning Signs of Heat-Related Driver Fatigue

A driver does not have to pass out to be unsafe. Heat-related fatigue can begin with mild symptoms. These early signs should not be ignored.

Watch for:

  • Strong thirst
  • Dry mouth
  • Heavy sweating
  • Headache
  • Dizziness
  • Nausea
  • Muscle cramps
  • Sleepiness
  • Irritability
  • Trouble focusing
  • Delayed reaction time
  • Drifting out of the lane
  • Missing traffic lights or signs

If these symptoms happen while driving, pull over in a safe place. Get into shade or air conditioning, drink water, and rest until you feel alert again. If symptoms are severe, such as confusion, fainting, chest pain, or trouble breathing, seek emergency medical care.

How to Prepare Your Vehicle for El Paso Summer Heat

Good vehicle maintenance can help prevent heat-related crashes and breakdowns. Before summer driving, drivers should check the systems that are most affected by heat.

Important summer vehicle checks include:

  • Tire pressure
  • Tire tread
  • Spare tire condition
  • Engine coolant
  • Oil level
  • Battery health
  • Brake condition
  • Air conditioning
  • Windshield wipers
  • Washer fluid
  • Headlights and brake lights

Drivers should also keep an emergency kit in the vehicle.

A summer driving kit may include:

  • Bottled water
  • Electrolyte packets
  • Phone charger
  • Flashlight
  • Jumper cables
  • First-aid supplies
  • Reflective warning triangle
  • Cooling towel
  • Sunscreen
  • Sunglasses
  • Basic tools

A windshield shade can also help lower the temperature inside a parked vehicle. If possible, park in shaded areas and allow the vehicle to cool before driving.

Safe Driving Habits During Extreme Heat

During a heat wave, simple choices can make driving safer.

Helpful tips include:

  • Drink water before driving
  • Avoid driving while tired
  • Eat light meals before long drives
  • Avoid alcohol before driving
  • Cool the vehicle before starting a trip
  • Take breaks on long drives
  • Avoid peak heat hours when possible
  • Leave extra space between vehicles
  • Watch for stalled vehicles
  • Do not ignore dashboard warning lights
  • Slow down in construction zones
  • Avoid aggressive driving

Heat can make people impatient. When traffic is slow and temperatures are high, drivers may tailgate, speed, or make sudden lane changes. Staying calm and leaving extra space can help prevent rear-end crashes and side-impact accidents.

What Happens to the Body During a Motor Vehicle Accident?

A motor vehicle accident can place sudden force on the body. Even a low-speed crash can injure muscles, ligaments, joints, discs, nerves, and soft tissue. Many injuries happen because the body moves faster than it can protect itself.

Common accident-related injuries include:

  • Whiplash
  • Neck sprains
  • Back strains
  • Disc irritation
  • Shoulder injuries
  • Hip pain
  • Sciatica
  • Headaches
  • Muscle spasms
  • Numbness or tingling
  • Joint stiffness
  • Dizziness
  • Fatigue

Symptoms may appear right away or show up hours or days later. This delay can happen because adrenaline can hide pain at first. A person may feel “okay” at the scene but wake up the next morning with neck pain, back pain, headaches, or stiffness.

That is why it is important to be checked after an accident, even if the crash seems minor.

Why Integrative Care Can Help After an MVA

After a car accident, the body may need more than one type of care. Pain may come from spinal joints, muscles, ligaments, nerves, inflammation, poor posture, or guarded movement. An integrative clinic can look at the whole person rather than focusing on a single symptom.

At ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine in El Paso, the care model focuses on whole-person injury recovery. ChiroMed’s public materials describe a multidisciplinary approach that may include chiropractic care, nurse practitioner services, rehabilitation, nutrition, naturopathic medicine, acupuncture, and integrative medicine support (ChiroMed, n.d.).

This type of approach may help patients who are dealing with:

  • Neck pain after a crash
  • Back pain after a crash
  • Headaches after whiplash
  • Muscle spasms
  • Reduced range of motion
  • Nerve symptoms
  • Fatigue after injury
  • Poor sleep after trauma
  • Trouble returning to work or daily activities

The goal is not just short-term pain relief. The goal is to help restore movement, reduce irritation, support healing, and improve function.

ChiroMed’s Multidisciplinary Injury Care Model

ChiroMed’s patient-centered approach is built around coordinated care. Instead of treating the spine, muscles, nerves, and general health as separate issues, the team looks at how these systems work together.

This can include:

  • Chiropractic evaluation
  • Spinal and joint care
  • Soft tissue work
  • Functional movement assessment
  • Rehabilitation exercises
  • Nutrition and lifestyle support
  • Functional medicine insights
  • Medical oversight when needed
  • Personal injury documentation

For accident patients, this matters because injuries often overlap. A patient may have neck pain, low back pain, headaches, sleep problems, inflammation, and stress simultaneously. A coordinated plan can help connect these symptoms to the crash and guide the patient through recovery.

Medical Oversight With Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD

A strong integrative clinic also needs medical oversight. Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, Board Certified in Internal Medicine, serves as Medical Director and Collaborative Physician with Injury Medical Clinic PA, also known as Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic, in El Paso, Texas. Clinic materials list Dr. Cardenas with NPI #1164426749 and Texas MD License #J2933. She brings more than 40 years of experience as an internist (ChiroMed, 2026).

In this model, Dr. Cardenas provides internal medicine oversight while Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, leads chiropractic, functional medicine, rehabilitation, and personal injury care. This type of collaboration supports safe, organized, and scope-aware care for patients recovering from accidents.

Medical oversight is especially helpful when a patient has:

  • High blood pressure
  • Diabetes
  • Heart disease risk
  • Medication concerns
  • Dizziness
  • Severe fatigue
  • Complex pain
  • Chronic inflammation
  • Multiple injuries
  • Older age
  • Previous health conditions

This helps the team make safer decisions and recognize when a referral, imaging study, or additional medical evaluation may be needed.

Dr. Alex Jimenez’s Clinical Approach to Accident Recovery

Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, has long focused on injury care, chiropractic care, functional medicine, and personal injury recovery in El Paso. His clinical observations often highlight that motor vehicle accidents can affect multiple areas of the body.

A crash may cause:

  • Spinal misalignment
  • Muscle guarding
  • Ligament strain
  • Nerve irritation
  • Joint restriction
  • Inflammation
  • Poor posture
  • Headaches
  • Fatigue
  • Reduced mobility

From a ChiroMed care perspective, recovery should be guided by a careful exam, clear documentation, and a plan that matches the patient’s needs. This may include chiropractic care, rehabilitation, functional medicine support, and medical collaboration when appropriate.

For example, a patient with whiplash may need neck mobility work, soft tissue care, postural correction, and strengthening. A patient with low back pain may need evaluation for disc irritation, hip restriction, sacroiliac joint involvement, or nerve symptoms. A patient with headaches may need assessment of the neck, upper back, jaw tension, sleep, hydration, and stress response.

Tailored Recovery Strategies After a Heat-Related MVA

If you are involved in a crash during extreme heat, the first step is safety. Move to a safe location if possible. Call emergency services if anyone is hurt. Get medical attention if symptoms are severe.

After the emergency stage, recovery may include:

  • A full injury evaluation
  • Chiropractic exam
  • Neurological screening
  • Range-of-motion testing
  • Muscle and joint assessment
  • Imaging when clinically needed
  • Gentle movement care
  • Soft tissue therapy
  • Rehab exercises
  • Hydration support
  • Anti-inflammatory nutrition
  • Sleep support
  • Follow-up visits to track progress

The care plan should change as the patient improves. Early care may focus on pain, stiffness, and inflammation. Later care may focus on strength, posture, balance, endurance, and return to daily activities.

When to Seek Immediate Medical Care

Some symptoms after a motor vehicle accident should be treated as urgent.

Seek emergency care if you have:

  • Loss of consciousness
  • Severe headache
  • Confusion
  • Chest pain
  • Trouble breathing
  • Severe neck pain
  • Severe back pain
  • Weakness in the arms or legs
  • Numbness that is getting worse
  • Loss of bladder or bowel control
  • Vision changes
  • Severe dizziness
  • Vomiting
  • Abdominal pain
  • Signs of heat illness

These symptoms may point to serious injury or heat-related illness and should not be ignored.

What to Look for in an El Paso MVA Clinic

After an accident, look for a clinic that understands both injury recovery and proper documentation.

Helpful qualities include:

  • Experience with motor vehicle accident injuries
  • Chiropractic and rehabilitation services
  • Medical oversight or collaboration
  • Clear exams and progress notes
  • Functional movement assessment
  • Patient education
  • Referral coordination
  • Whole-person recovery planning
  • Personal injury experience

At ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine, the focus is on helping patients understand their injuries, improve movement, and support recovery through coordinated care.

Final Thoughts: Protect Yourself Before and After the Crash

Extreme heat can raise the risk of car accidents in El Paso. Heat can affect the driver’s focus, the vehicle’s performance, and road safety. Preparing your vehicle, staying hydrated, recognizing heat fatigue, and driving with patience can reduce your risk.

If a crash happens, do not ignore symptoms like neck pain, back pain, headaches, stiffness, dizziness, numbness, or fatigue. These symptoms may be signs of deeper injury.

ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine in El Paso offers a multidisciplinary path for accident recovery. With Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, providing chiropractic, functional medicine, rehabilitation, and personal injury care, and Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, providing medical direction and internal medicine oversight, patients can receive a broader and more coordinated approach to healing.


References

Accident & Injury Chiropractic. (n.d.). High temperatures and car crashes

Accident Centers of Texas. (n.d.). Road to recovery: How chiropractic care helps in healing spinal injuries after motor vehicle accidents

Callahan Law Firm. (2025). Do heat waves increase the chances of auto accidents?

ChiroMed. (n.d.). ChiroMed – Integrated Medicine holistic healthcare in El Paso, TX

ChiroMed. (2026). Integrative care for spine, joint, and muscle pain

DeMayo Law Offices. (2025). A study considering the significant effects of hot weather on road accident statistics

Gu, Z., Peng, B., & Xin, Y. (2025). Higher traffic crash risk in extreme hot days? A spatiotemporal examination of risk factors and influencing features

Health Coach Clinic. (n.d.). Auto accident recovery with functional medicine guide

Health Coach Clinic. (n.d.). Chiropractic integrative care for motor vehicle accidents

Health Coach Clinic. (n.d.). Integrative medicine approach: Healing after accidents

Hsu, C. K. (2026). Extreme heat disproportionately increases severe road traffic injuries

Jim Adler & Associates. (2025). How extreme heat and car accidents are connected

Jimenez, A. (n.d.). El Paso, TX chiropractor Dr. Alex Jimenez DC: Personal injury specialist

Jimenez, A. (n.d.). Prevent drowsy driving accidents with energy foods

Jimenez, A. (2025). Recovering from car accidents: A holistic approach with functional medicine and chiropractic care

Martinez Law Office. (2024). Car accidents and the heat: Why the heat makes accidents worse

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. (n.d.). Child heatstroke prevention: Prevent hot car deaths

Rodriguez & Associates. (n.d.). Common heat-related car accidents

Scientific American. (2023). Hotter days are increasing car crashes and fatalities

Photobiomodulation for Pain Relief and Recovery

Photobiomodulation for Pain Relief and Recovery

Abstract

This educational article explores the profound cellular mechanisms behind Photobiomodulation Therapy (PBMT), often known as laser therapy, and its transformative potential in modern medicine. From a first-person perspective, I will guide you through the scientific journey of how light energy interacts with our cells to promote healing, reduce inflammation, and restore function. We will delve into the latest findings from leading researchers, explaining how PBMT activates mitochondria, modulates cytokine responses, and stimulates tissue regeneration across nerves and muscles. This post will also illuminate the synergistic relationship between PBMT and orthobiologics such as Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP), demonstrating how combining these therapies can enhance clinical outcomes. Finally, I will explain how we integrate these advanced modalities at our clinic, where a multidisciplinary team approach, featuring integrative chiropractic care alongside medical oversight, provides a comprehensive and evidence-based path to recovery for our patients.


A Personal Journey into the Power of Light

After nearly a decade in this field, I feel like I’ve finally found my people. For years, mentioning the word “laser” in medical circles felt like an uphill battle. I faced skepticism and resistance—metaphorical rotten tomatoes and broken beer bottles for the first five years. Many of you in the regenerative medicine space can likely relate to that struggle. Pushing the boundaries of biologic-based therapies has been a similar journey. That’s why I am so thrilled to have the opportunity to share my experience and the powerful science that has not only vindicated this work but is now revolutionizing how we approach healing.

It all begins with a fundamental biological principle we often overlook: photosynthesis. The sun shines, plants grow, and they sustain life on our planet. We, as a species, have evolved over hundreds of thousands of years under that very sun. Our cells, down to their deepest genetic components, have developed a sensitivity to light.

Think about it this way: from our first days in medical school, we are taught that sunlight is essential for vitamin D synthesis. We accept this without question. Yet a significant gap exists in modern medical education regarding the broader therapeutic applications of light—a field known as Photobiomodulation Therapy (PBMT). This post is my effort to bridge that gap and explain how we can harness light to unlock the body’s innate ability to heal itself.

Our Integrative Approach at Injury Medical Clinic

At our practice, Injury Medical Clinic PA, we believe in a team-based, patient-centered model. My role as a Doctor of Chiropractic (DC) with advanced training as a Nurse Practitioner (APRN) and in Functional Medicine (CFMP, IFMCP) is to focus on the biomechanical, neurological, and metabolic aspects of health. I am privileged to work alongside Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, a Board-Certified Internist with over 40 years of invaluable experience. Dr. Cardenas serves as our Medical Director and Collaborative Physician, providing essential medical oversight and ensuring our patients receive comprehensive, integrated care.

This multidisciplinary setup allows us to blend the best of different worlds:

  • Chiropractic Care: We address musculoskeletal alignment, nerve function, and biomechanics to restore the body’s structural integrity.
  • Medical Oversight: Dr. Cardenas provides the medical diagnosis, management, and direction necessary for complex cases, especially in personal injury and chronic disease.
  • Functional Medicine: We investigate the root causes of dysfunction, considering genetics, lifestyle, and environmental factors to develop personalized treatment plans.
  • Advanced Therapies: We incorporate cutting-edge modalities like Photobiomodulation (PBMT) and orthobiologics to accelerate healing at the cellular level.

This collaborative environment ensures that when we recommend a therapy like PBMT, it is part of a holistic strategy designed to treat the whole person, not just the symptom.

What is Photobiomodulation? Understanding the Language of Our Cells

Let’s break down the term:

  • Photo: Light
  • Bio: Life
  • Modulation: To affect or change

Photobiomodulation is the process of using light to create a biological change. We know that light is energy, and its fundamental units are photons. Think of photons as the currency of light energy. When these photons penetrate our tissues, they transfer their energy to our cells, initiating a cascade of biological responses.

For the first twenty years of my practice, I was a mechanic, using tools to “fix” conditions. For the last ten, I have become more of a biologist, focused on creating the right environment for the body’s own cells to orchestrate a healing response. Cellular recovery is the goal, and this is where PBMT truly shines.

The Cellular Mechanisms: From Mitochondria to Tissue Repair

Everyone is talking about mitochondrial health and ATP production, but the effects of PBMT go much deeper. Let’s explore the documented cellular reactions that translate into the clinical outcomes we see every day—less pain in the shoulder, knee, or elbow.

1. Mitochondrial Activation and Energy Production

The primary target of PBMT within our cells is an enzyme in the mitochondria called cytochrome C oxidase. This enzyme is a photoacceptor, meaning it is specifically designed to absorb light. When photons of the correct wavelength strike this enzyme, it becomes more active. This supercharges the Krebs cycle, leading to several critical downstream effects:

  • Increased ATP Production: The cell’s energy currency is produced in greater abundance, providing the fuel needed for repair and function.
  • Modulation of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS): While high levels of ROS cause oxidative stress, a transient, controlled increase acts as a crucial signaling molecule.
  • Release of Nitric Oxide: Light can displace nitric oxide bound to cytochrome c oxidase, allowing oxygen to bind more efficiently and increasing cellular respiration. The released nitric oxide then acts as a vasodilator, improving local blood flow.

This initial spark in the mitochondria triggers a cascade that sends messages all the way to the cell’s nucleus, initiating gene transcription. This is how the cell starts producing the proteins and signaling molecules—cytokines—that direct the healing process.

2. Immune Modulation: Shifting from Inflammation to Repair

When you sustain an injury, your body floods the area with pro-inflammatory cytokines to kickstart the healing process. However, in chronic conditions, this inflammatory state can become “stalled,” preventing true recovery. PBMT helps modulate this immune response.

We can scientifically document that PBMT, using the right wavelength and dose, can:

  • Increase anti-inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin-10 (IL-10).
  • Reduce pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin-6 (IL-6).

Essentially, PBMT helps guide the body out of the persistent inflammatory phase and into the reparative, healing phase.

3. Enhancing Blood Flow and Nerve Regeneration

The benefits continue to cascade through the body’s systems:

  • Angiogenesis: PBMT has been shown to stimulate angiogenesis by promoting the production of cytokines, including galectin-1. Improved microcirculation is fundamental for delivering oxygen and nutrients to damaged tissue and removing waste products.
  • Neurogenesis: We can even see improvements at the neuronal level. Studies have demonstrated that PBMT can upregulate proteins like hnRNP K, which are involved in axonal growth and neuronal repair. This is why it’s so effective for nerve-related pain and injury recovery.

4. Accelerating Muscle and Connective Tissue Recovery

  • Muscle Recovery: Using electron microscopy, researchers have confirmed that PBMT improves muscle cell development and increases myoglobin production, thereby enhancing oxygenation and speeding recovery after exertion or injury.
  • Fibroblast Activation: Fibroblasts are the body’s master builders, responsible for producing collagen and forming the structural framework for tissue repair. PBMT provides the energy these cells need to activate and get to work, which is why it pairs so well with orthobiologics that send the initial “go” signal.

By targeting these fundamental cellular processes, PBMT doesn’t just treat conditions like tendonitis or arthritis; it also treats the dysfunctional cells within the pathological tissue. It changes the cellular environment to one that fosters healing. That’s why it has such a broad range of applications for anything that ends in “-itis.”

The Science of Light: Wavelength, Penetration, and the Therapeutic Window

Not all light is created equal. The electromagnetic spectrum ranges from deadly gamma rays with very short wavelengths to harmless radio waves with very long wavelengths. There is a specific “therapeutic window” for PBMT, typically between 600 nanometers (red light) and 1200 nanometers (near-infrared light).

Why is this range so important? It’s all about penetration. To be effective, photons must reach the target tissue. Three primary obstacles stand in their way: skin, blood (hemoglobin), and water. The wavelengths within the therapeutic window are most adept at bypassing these absorbers and penetrating deep into the body, where musculoskeletal injuries reside.

  • Red light (around 600-700 nm) is excellent for superficial tissues. It penetrates only a few millimeters, making it great for skin conditions, but it won’t reach deep muscles or joints.
  • Near-infrared light (around 800-1100 nm) penetrates much deeper, making it the workhorse for orthopedic and musculoskeletal conditions.

At our clinic, we use advanced systems like MLS (Multiwave Locked System) Laser Technology. I am a huge fan of this technology because it synchronizes two different wavelengths—one continuous and one pulsed. The pulsed wavelength, which fires thousands of times per second, allows the tissue to absorb light energy without building up excessive heat. This makes the treatment incredibly safe and effective, allowing for unattended application without the risk of thermal damage.

The Clinical Applications: From Acute Injury to Chronic Pain

In my practice, which includes serving as a team physician for a Division I school, we use PBMT across a spectrum of conditions:

  • Acute Injuries: For our athletes, PBMT is a go-to for sprains, strains, and contusions. It significantly reduces recovery time and gets them back on the field faster.
  • Post-Operative Recovery: Surgery is, in essence, a controlled acute injury. We use PBMT postoperatively to reduce swelling, bruising, and pain, resulting in cleaner incisions and significantly improved patient-reported outcomes.
  • Chronic Inflammatory Conditions: For issues such as a thickened Achilles tendon or degenerative joint disease, where the inflammatory process is stalled, PBMT can reignite the healing cascade.

The evidence is overwhelming. With over 7,000 published studies, PBMT is gaining recognition from major health organizations. The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) mentions “laser photobiomodulation” dozens of times in its revised opioid guidelines as a non-pharmacological option for acute, subacute, and chronic pain. The science is no longer theoretical; it’s a clinical reality.

The Ultimate Synergy: Combining PBMT with Orthobiologics

This is where the magic truly happens. Orthobiologics like Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP) are rich in growth factors and anti-inflammatory proteins. They are a powerful message sent to the site of injury, instructing the local cells to begin the repair process.

Now, imagine giving those cells the fuel they need to carry out those instructions. That is what PBMT does.

  • Orthobiologics provide the blueprint (the message).
  • PBMT provides the energy (the fuel).

By combining these two therapies, we are creating the optimal environment for cellular activity, healing, and regeneration. People are starting to talk about this synergy. A landmark study in the veterinary world—where patients don’t have secondary gain or placebo effects—provided powerful proof (Ferreira et al., 2021). In this canine study on knee osteoarthritis, dogs were treated with PBMT alone, then PRP alone, and finally a combination of both. The results were clear: the combination therapy produced significantly better outcomes.

The Future is Biology: A Glimpse into Our Research

We are committed to contributing to this growing body of evidence. I’m incredibly proud to share a “proud dad moment.” My son, Zachary, recently completed a study at the Mass General Brigham Enable BioSkills Lab. We took human tenocytes (tendon cells) and applied our laser over them.

The results were astounding: we demonstrated a 20% dose-dependent increase in tenocyte proliferation from PBMT alone.

We are literally proving that we can make tendon cells multiply with light. Our next steps involve qPCR to analyze gene expression and ELISA to measure protein levels. This research helps us move from anecdotal success to hard, reproducible science. The future of orthopedics isn’t just metal and screws; it’s biology. It’s about working with the body, not just on it.

From modulating inflammation to fueling cellular engines, Photobiomodulation Therapy has proven itself to be a cornerstone of modern, integrative care. I’ve witnessed its power firsthand, and I am honored to share this knowledge with you. It has been a pleasure to take you on this journey into the science of light and healing.


References

  • Ferreira, M. P., Tucholski, G. Z., Dória, R. G. S., de Oliveira, B. C., Pimpão, C. T., & De Nardi, A. B. (2021). Intra-articular injections of platelet-rich plasma and photobiomodulation therapy (904 nm) for the treatment of canine osteoarthritis: A double-blinded, randomized clinical trial. Research in Veterinary Science, 139, 270–279. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rvsc.2021.07.027
  • Jimenez, A. (n.d.). Clinical Observations. Retrieved from https://chiromed.com/ and https://www.linkedin.com/in/dralexjimenez/

Joint Regeneration with Advanced Orthobiologics

Joint Regeneration with Advanced Orthobiologics

Joint Regeneration with Advanced Orthobiologics

Abstract:

In this educational post, I walk you through the latest evidence-based insights on platelet-rich plasma (PRP), subchondral interventions, microneedle patch applications, adipose tissue harvesting, and the vital importance of proper orthobiologics nomenclature. I explain why granulocyte (neutrophil) content matters, how mononuclear cell concentration improves outcomes, and the clinical decision-making behind PRP preparation, spin protocols, and kit selection. I also present how we integrate chiropractic, functional medicine, and rehabilitative care under medical oversight at Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic) in El Paso, Texas, where Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD, Board Certified in Internal Medicine (NPI #1164426749, Texas MD License #J2933), serves as Medical Director and Collaborative Physician. Throughout, I connect physiology to practical treatment choices and highlight real-world observations from our practice to help patients and clinicians make informed decisions.

Evidence-Based Orthobiologics: Setting the Stage

I have found that clarity in definitions and protocols determines clinical success with orthobiologics. Whether you are preparing platelet-rich plasma (PRP), concentrating mononuclear cells, or planning a subchondral intervention, the cellular profile, preparation method, and injection target must align with the patient’s physiology and clinical goals. Over the last decade, leading researchers have shown that the immune cell composition of biologic preparations—especially the neutrophil-to-lymphocyte balance—can either support healing or further inflame a joint. My goal here is to simplify what the science says, explain why it matters for pain and function, and demonstrate how our integrated chiropractic-medical model leverages these insights for individualized care.

Medical Direction and Integrative Team Care in El Paso, Texas

At Injury Medical Clinic PA (Mission Plaza Injury Medical Clinic) in El Paso, Texas, our care model is multidisciplinary and patient-centered:

  • Medical Oversight: Dr. Maria Guadalupe Cardenas, MD (Board Certified in Internal Medicine, NPI #1164426749, Texas MD License #J2933) serves as Medical Director and Collaborative Physician, guiding medical protocols, safety, and interventional decision-making.
  • Integrative Chiropractic Care: I, Dr. Alex Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, CFMP, IFMCP, ATN, CCST, provide chiropractic and functional medicine services that harmonize with orthobiologics and rehabilitation.
  • Functional Medicine: We evaluate metabolic, inflammatory, and endocrine factors that influence joint biology and tissue remodeling.
  • Personal Injury and Rehabilitation: Our team manages acute and chronic musculoskeletal injuries with structured rehab, bracing, movement retraining, and neuromuscular stabilization.

This integrated setup is common in injury and regenerative clinics, where an MD provides medical direction alongside a chiropractor, ensuring medical safety and precision in biologic technique while maximizing outcomes through whole-person rehabilitation.

Understanding PRP: Why Neutrophil Content Matters

PRP is not a single product—it is a spectrum. The key variable is the white blood cell (WBC) composition—particularly neutrophils and mononuclear cells (lymphocytes and monocytes).

  • Neutrophils are first responders in innate immunity. They release reactive oxygen species and proteases that can accelerate inflammation and tissue breakdown in a sensitive joint space.
  • Mononuclear cells (lymphocytes, monocytes) participate in more regulated immune signaling and tissue remodeling; when present in appropriate ratios, they can support healing without excessive inflammation.

Several studies and clinical observations have shown:

  • PRP with high neutrophil content can provoke greater intra-articular inflammation, potentially worsening pain post-injection in some patients.
  • PRP that is leukocyte-poor or that concentrates mononuclear cells preferentially tends to be better tolerated in joints with synovial sensitivity or osteoarthritis.

Physiologically, the synovial membrane is richly vascularized and immunologically active. Injecting a neutrophil-rich product into a joint can trigger a robust inflammatory cascade—including cytokine release (e.g., IL-1β, TNF-α), matrix metalloproteinase activation, and nociceptive signaling—that can lead to post-injection flares and unhappy patients. Conversely, platelet-derived growth factors (PDGF, TGF-β, VEGF) can be harnessed more effectively when neutrophil numbers are minimized, allowing anabolic signaling to dominate catabolic degradation in the joint milieu.

PRP Nomenclature and System Differences: Why the Labels Can Mislead

There are important regional and system-based differences:

  • In some European settings, PRP preparation relies on phlebotomy service protocols without benchtop concentration machines. The output may differ from US machine-based systems in WBC composition.
  • In US clinics, proprietary kits and centrifuges often claim a “leukocyte-poor” core; however, analyses frequently show reduced granulocytes with relatively elevated lymphocytes. This does not automatically mean low total WBCs; the differential matters.

What you must do clinically:

  • Ask the system vendor for data on WBC subsets: neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, and total WBC count.
  • Request peer-reviewed data where the system was used, and outcomes were reported, not just internal white papers.
  • Verify your own pre- and post-spin counts when possible. Many centers now measure the input blood and final PRP to confirm the cellular profile.

Take-home message: Be cautious with nomenclature. A product labeled “leukocyte-poor” may still have a mononuclear-rich profile. If neutrophil counts are elevated, injecting into a joint can increase post-procedure inflammation. Know your kit, spin cycles, and layer collection technique.

Practical PRP Preparation: Spin Protocols, Volumes, and Targets

In our clinical workflow:

  • We tailor centrifugation speeds and durations (“spins”) to produce the intended cellular composition.
  • We select collection layers carefully—buffycline strategies differ based on whether we aim for leukocyte-poor PRP versus customized mononuclear enrichment.
  • For knee osteoarthritis, common whole-blood draws range from approximately 60 cc to 120 cc, with some protocols extending to 180 cc depending on patient size and target joint volume. The total platelet yield should be sufficient to achieve meaningful growth factor concentrations without overt WBC contamination.

Why volumes matter: Larger draw volumes improve the consistency of platelet concentration, allowing us to achieve the desired dose of growth factors for cartilage and synovium while maintaining control over WBC differentials. The ultimate goals are to reduce nociception, improve synovial homeostasis, and stimulate local mesenchymal cell activity.

Microneedle Patch Therapy: A Second-Line Biologic Option

I often consider microneedle patch strategies for osteoarthritis patients who:

  • Have persistent effusions or synovitis.
  • Have undergone surgery and desire adjunctive biologic support.
  • Have tried first-line orthobiologics without sufficient relief and wish to avoid or delay arthroplasty.

Microneedle patches can deliver localized biologic payloads or microchannels that modulate synovial barriers and absorption kinetics. Clinically, some patients respond even after failing other approaches. Why might this work?

  • Microchanneling may improve the distribution of biologic agents across the synovial lining.
  • Localized microtrauma triggers a controlled healing response, enhancing paracrine signaling and extracellular matrix turnover.

While not universally effective, microneedle approaches can be valuable as a second-line option, particularly when combined with targeted rehabilitation and metabolic optimization.

Adipose Tissue Harvesting in the Clinic: Comfort, Safety, and Physiology

From plastic surgery literature, awake liposuction procedures have demonstrated safety advantages over general anesthesia for select patients. In our clinic, adipose harvesting is performed in a comfortable procedure room setting with:

  • Tumescent anesthesia: A saline–lidocaine solution is infiltrated into subcutaneous fat. The longer it rests—typically at least 20–30 minutes—the easier and safer the harvest.
  • Gentle technique: Music, prone positioning when appropriate, and careful cannula selection improve patient comfort.

Why timing matters: Tumescent fluid disperses and separates fat lobules, reduces bleeding via vasoconstrictors, and numbs tissue. Allowing sufficient dwell time lowers mechanical resistance and improves adipose integrity, which is crucial if the tissue will be used for stromal vascular fraction (where permissible) or other biologic applications.

Subchondral Interventions: Decompression, Biology, and Load Management

Subchondral bone marrow lesions and edema contribute to knee pain and joint degeneration. Interventions can include:

  • Subchondral decompression via needle (reducing pressure).
  • Injection of biologics (e.g., bone marrow-derived cells) or calcium phosphate cements.

Across studies, a general pattern emerges:

  • Many approaches report meaningful improvement in roughly 80% of patients, with a consistent 20% failure rate.
  • The key question is whether the benefit comes from the decompression (pressure relief) itself, the injected biologic material, or both.

Physiologically:

  • Elevated intraosseous pressure impairs microcirculation and osteocyte function.
  • Decompression restores perfusion, reduces nociceptive signaling from subchondral nociceptors, and can stabilize trabecular microarchitecture.
  • Biologic materials may provide scaffolding, modulate local cytokine levels, or promote osteogenesis and remodeling; however, if mechanical overload persists, the effects attenuate over time.

Clinical reasoning:

  • Decompression can provide short- to medium-term relief by restoring subchondral hemodynamics.
  • Biologic augmentation may further improve outcomes by addressing cellular deficits and promoting repair.
  • Long-term success requires load management: osteotomy in surgical cases, bracing, weight loss, quadriceps strengthening, gait retraining, and activity modification.

Load, Alignment, and Muscle: Why Mechanics Determine Biology

Even the most sophisticated orthobiologics cannot overcome persistent mechanical overload. Consider:

  • Malalignment (varus/valgus) magnifies compartment pressure and cartilage shear stress.
  • Weak quadriceps reduce shock absorption, transferring load to cartilage and subchondral bone.
  • Obesity and poor movement patterns sustain inflammatory adipokine signaling and joint stress.

Integrating chiropractic and rehabilitation:

  • Chiropractic care focuses on restoring regional biomechanics—lumbar-pelvic alignment, hip mobility, foot and ankle mechanics—which affect knee loading.
  • Neuromuscular re-education and strengthening reestablish dynamic joint stability and distribute forces appropriately.
  • Functional medicine evaluates systemic inflammation, insulin resistance, and microvascular health—each influences the joint’s ability to heal.

When we decompress a subchondral lesion, the success is amplified by correcting the ground-up mechanics—foot posture, tibial rotation, femoral tracking—and building strength capacity. This is where integrative chiropractic and medical oversight converge to create lasting change.

PRP Composition: Platelets High, Neutrophils Low

For intra-articular PRP:

  • Aim for high platelet counts to deliver concentrated growth factors.
  • Keep neutrophils low to minimize acute inflammatory flares.
  • Consider tailoring mononuclear cell levels based on patient phenotype (e.g., synovitis status, cartilage condition).

Why this works:

  • Platelets release PDGF, TGF-β, IGF-1, and VEGF that stimulate chondrocyte anabolic activity, synovial healing, and angiogenic support at the bone–cartilage interface.
  • Reduced neutrophils limit protease and ROS-mediated cartilage matrix degradation.
  • Controlled presence of mononuclear cells can balance immunomodulation without provoking excessive synovitis.

Clinical Workflow: Measuring What Matters

We increasingly follow a pre- and post-spin data model:

  • Measure patient’s baseline CBC, platelet count, and inflammatory markers when appropriate.
  • Quantify post-spin PRP composition: platelets, total WBC, neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes.
  • Adjust technique: change spin speeds, durations, and layer-harvest strategy to meet target profiles.
  • Record outcomes over time to correlate cellular composition with pain relief, function, and imaging findings.

This approach reduces guesswork and supports personalized biologics—a precision medicine paradigm applied to joint care.

Integrative Chiropractic Care Within Orthobiologics: What I Do and Why

Chiropractic care is not a substitute for biologic therapy; it is a complementary discipline that optimizes biomechanics and central nervous system regulation. In our clinic, my role includes:

  • Assessment of regional interdependence: spine, pelvis, hip, knee, ankle complexes.
  • Manual therapy to restore joint mobility and soft tissue pliability, reducing compensatory strain that exacerbates joint inflammation.
  • Movement retraining: gait mechanics, proprioception, neuromuscular activation patterns for quadriceps, gluteal, and calf muscles.
  • Ergonomic and lifestyle coaching: minimizing repetitive stressors, improving sleep and stress resilience to modulate systemic inflammatory tone.

Why this matters: Tissue healing is burdened by abnormal mechanics. By normalizing load distribution and improving neuromuscular control, the joint experiences lower shear forces and better perfusion—conditions under which orthobiologics can express their full therapeutic potential.

Functional Medicine Lens: Metabolism and Inflammation Drive Outcomes

Under medical direction, we evaluate metabolic factors that influence joint healing:

  • Insulin resistance and hyperglycemia impair microvascular perfusion and collagen synthesis.
  • Vitamin D deficiency affects bone remodeling and immune regulation.
  • The omega-6-to-omega-3 ratio shapes eicosanoid signaling—pro-inflammatory versus pro-resolving pathways.
  • Gut dysbiosis and endotoxemia (LPS) can perpetuate systemic inflammation that manifests in joints.

Interventions:

  • Nutritional optimization: protein sufficiency for collagen, anti-inflammatory dietary patterns, targeted supplementation when indicated.
  • Weight management: reduces mechanical load and inflammatory adipokines.
  • Sleep and stress: improve autonomic balance, reducing cortisol dysregulation that impairs tissue repair.

We combine these with orthobiologic strategies to address both the local tissue and the systemic milieu.

Patient Selection and Expectation Management

Not all patients are ideal candidates for each orthobiologic. I prioritize:

  • Clinical phenotype: degree of synovitis, effusion, cartilage loss, bone marrow lesions, alignment status.
  • Comorbid risks: metabolic disease, bleeding disorders, medication profiles.
  • Prior treatment history: response to corticosteroids, hyaluronic acid, PRP, or surgical interventions.

Expectation setting:

  • PRP, microneedle patches, and subchondral decompression can produce meaningful improvements but are not universal cures.
  • We discuss likely trajectories—e.g., 80% responder profiles and a 20% risk of limited response—and the steps we take to tilt the odds in the patient’s favor through integrated care.

The Role of Medical Oversight: Safety and Precision

With Dr. Cardenas’s medical direction:

  • We ensure sterile technique and adherence to safety protocols in biologic preparation and injection.
  • We monitor for adverse events—synovitis flare, infection risk, bleeding—especially in complex patients.
  • We coordinate imaging, lab testing, and referrals for surgical consults when indicated.

This collaboration allows us to bridge medical science and manual therapy within a single plan of care, maximizing benefits while maintaining safety standards.

Putting It All Together: A Stepwise Clinical Strategy

A typical pathway for a patient with knee osteoarthritis and persistent effusion:

  • Comprehensive evaluation: biomechanics, metabolic status, imaging (e.g., MRI for bone marrow lesions).
  • Initial conservative optimization: chiropractic alignment, neuromuscular strengthening, bracing if necessary, nutrition and sleep.
  • PRP planning: choose a kit and spin protocol that yield high platelet counts and low neutrophil counts. Confirm cellular counts when feasible.
  • Injection: ultrasound-guided intra-articular PRP with peri-injection pain management tailored to synovitis sensitivity.
  • If persistent pain or marrow lesion features: consider subchondral decompression with or without biologic augmentation, paired with load management (orthotics, braces, exercise).
  • Second-line option: microneedle patch for non-responders seeking minimally invasive biologic support.
  • Follow-up: track function, pain scores, and repeat imaging as needed; adjust care based on objective and subjective data.

Clinical Observations from Practice

Drawing from my clinical experiences and observations shared at Chiromed and via professional profiles:

  • Patients respond best when orthobiologics are integrated with biomechanical correction and the reduction of systemic inflammation.
  • Repeat procedures should be considered in the context of improved mechanics and metabolic status rather than as standalone fixes.
  • Advanced planning—such as pre/post PRP analytics, timed tumescent anesthesia dwell for adipose harvest, and precise ultrasound guidance—reduces complications and improves patient comfort.

These real-world insights underscore that success comes from layered interventions, careful timing, and relentless attention to detail.

Key Takeaways

  • Be precise with PRP composition: favor high platelet counts and low neutrophil counts for joint injections.
  • Verify WBC differentials: don’t rely solely on kit marketing; measure when possible.
  • Subchondral interventions help by pressure reduction and biologic support, but long-term success requires load and alignment management.
  • Microneedle patches are a reasonable second-line option for select OA patients with persistent effusions.
  • Integrative care—medical oversight, chiropractic biomechanics, functional medicine—delivers superior outcomes by addressing both local tissue biology and systemic drivers.
  • Patient-centered protocols and expectation setting reduce disappointment and align care with realistic goals.

References