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








