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Chiropractic and ESWT Support Flexibility and Movement

Chiropractic and ESWT Support Flexibility and Movement

Chiropractic and ESWT Support Flexibility and Movement

Flexibility is a big part of feeling well and moving with ease. It helps you bend, twist, reach, walk, lift, and exercise with less strain. When the body becomes stiff, tight, or out of balance, even simple daily activities can become harder. Many people notice this in the neck, shoulders, lower back, hips, knees, calves, or feet. Over time, those restrictions can affect posture, comfort, and physical performance.

At ChiroMed, an integrative chiropractic approach focuses on more than quick symptom relief. The goal is to help the body move better by improving joint alignment, reducing muscle tension, supporting nervous system function, and strengthening movement patterns. When Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy, or ESWT, is added to the treatment plan, it can further support flexibility by addressing soft tissue problems such as scar tissue, tendon strain, and chronic tightness. Together, these therapies may help restore range of motion, reduce stiffness, and support long-term mobility (Gentle Chiropractic, 2025; San Diego NUCCA, n.d.).

Why Flexibility Is Important

Flexibility is not just for athletes or people who exercise every day. It matters for anyone who wants to move comfortably and stay active. Healthy flexibility helps muscles and joints work together so the body can move smoothly and efficiently. It also supports better posture, balance, coordination, and comfort throughout the day.

When flexibility decreases, the body often begins to compensate. One area may tighten while another area becomes overworked. This can lead to poor movement habits and ongoing discomfort.

Common signs of reduced flexibility include:

  • Stiffness when getting out of bed
  • Tightness after sitting too long
  • Trouble bending, reaching, or twisting
  • Reduced range of motion in the shoulders, hips, or back
  • Feeling sore or restricted during exercise
  • Muscle tension that keeps coming back

These problems often develop slowly. Poor posture, long hours of sitting, repetitive movements, sports-related stress, and old injuries can all worsen flexibility over time (ThinkVida, n.d.; TXMAC, n.d.-a).

How Integrative Chiropractic Care Helps the Body Stay Flexible

Integrative chiropractic care is designed to address both structure and function. Instead of focusing only on where pain is felt, it looks at how the whole body moves. This can include chiropractic adjustments, stretching, soft tissue support, posture advice, and therapeutic exercises.

This type of care helps flexibility in several ways.

Restoring Better Joint Motion

When the spine or other joints are not moving well, the body often becomes stiff and guarded. Chiropractic adjustments are used to improve motion in restricted joints. Improved joint mobility can make everyday activities easier and may reduce stress on surrounding muscles and tissues (Dubuque Chiropractic, n.d.; Rodgers Stein Chiropractic, n.d.-a).

Many people describe this change as feeling looser or less stuck after treatment. That improved motion can be especially helpful in the neck, upper back, lower back, shoulders, hips, knees, and ankles.

Reducing Muscle Tension

Tight muscles can limit flexibility even when the joints are not severely damaged. When muscles stay tense for long periods, they can pull the body out of balance and make movement feel restricted. Integrative chiropractic treatment often includes stretching and soft-tissue work to help muscles relax and function more effectively (Chiropractic Fitness, n.d.; Alter Chiropractic, n.d.).

When tension goes down, movement often becomes smoother and less painful.

Supporting the Nervous System

The nervous system helps control posture, muscle activity, balance, and coordination. Chiropractic care often focuses on improving how the spine and joints interact with the nervous system. When that system works more efficiently, muscles may respond better, and movement can become more natural (Gentle Chiropractic, 2025; Thrive Health Systems, n.d.).

This is important because flexibility is not only about tissue length. It is also about how the brain and body communicate during motion.

Improving Movement Patterns

Good flexibility is easier to maintain when the body learns better movement habits. That is why therapeutic exercises are such an important part of integrative care. Exercises help strengthen weak muscles, improve control, and support proper joint function. This makes it easier for the body to keep the benefits of treatment over time (OAA Orthopaedic Specialists, n.d.; Chiropractic Fitness, n.d.).

Why Stretching and Therapeutic Exercise Matter

Adjustments can help restore motion, but stretching and exercise help the body hold onto those gains. Stretching supports tissue length and mobility. Therapeutic exercise helps improve stability, coordination, and body control.

A flexibility-focused plan may include:

  • Gentle stretching for tight muscle groups
  • Mobility drills for stiff joints
  • Core exercises for spinal support
  • Postural exercises for daily alignment
  • Strengthening work for weak stabilizing muscles
  • Balance and coordination training

These methods work together so muscles and joints can support one another more effectively. That is one of the key ideas behind integrative chiropractic care. The body needs both mobility and stability to stay flexible and strong (Rodgers Stein Chiropractic, n.d.-b; TXMAC, n.d.-b).

What ESWT Is and Why It Helps Flexibility

Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy, or ESWT, is a noninvasive treatment that uses acoustic waves to stimulate tissue repair. It is commonly used for chronic soft tissue problems that can limit motion and cause long-term discomfort.

Many flexibility problems are not caused by joint restriction alone. In some cases, the main issue is in the muscles, tendons, or fascia. Scar tissue, chronic inflammation, tendon overload, and soft tissue adhesions can make movement feel tight and painful. ESWT is often used to address these issues by promoting blood flow and tissue healing (Bend Total Body Chiropractic, 2023; Corrective Chiropractic, n.d.).

ESWT may help by:

  • Increasing circulation to the treated area
  • Supporting tissue repair
  • Reducing pain and inflammation
  • Breaking down scar tissue and adhesions
  • Improving tissue elasticity
  • Helping muscles and tendons move more freely

This can be especially useful when a patient has chronic tightness that does not improve enough with stretching or rest alone (InSpine Chiropractic, n.d.; Chiropractic Experience, n.d.).

Why Chiropractic Care and ESWT Work Well Together

Chiropractic care and ESWT address different aspects of the same problem. Chiropractic adjustments help restore motion in the joints and spine. ESWT helps improve the condition of the soft tissues around those joints. When both are used together, the body may respond better than it would with only one treatment.

This two-part approach can help:

  • Improve joint mechanics
  • Reduce muscle guarding
  • Break up scar tissue
  • Improve blood flow
  • Lower chronic inflammation
  • Increase range of motion
  • Support better long-term movement

This is one reason many integrative clinics combine chiropractic care and ESWT. The goal is to improve both how the body moves and the condition of the tissues that support that movement (San Diego NUCCA, n.d.; My Office Info, n.d.; Holistiq, n.d.).

Conditions That Can Limit Flexibility

A combined approach of chiropractic care and ESWT is often used for conditions involving both movement restriction and soft-tissue stress.

Frozen Shoulder

Frozen shoulder can cause severe stiffness, pain, and loss of motion. It often makes reaching overhead or behind the back very difficult. Adjustments, mobility work, and ESWT may help improve movement and reduce soft-tissue restrictions around the shoulder complex (Gentle Chiropractic, n.d.; Chiro Oklahoma City, 2025).

Achilles Tendinopathy

The Achilles tendon can become painful and tight, especially in active people or in those with faulty movement mechanics. ESWT is often used to support tendon healing, while chiropractic treatment may help improve the mechanics of the ankle, foot, knee, hip, and spine that affect how the tendon is loaded (Chiropractic First, n.d.; Dr. Alex Jimenez, 2026a).

Chronic Muscle Tightness

Long-term tightness in the neck, back, hips, or legs can come from stress, poor posture, repetitive work, or old injuries. In these cases, chiropractic care may restore joint motion while ESWT helps address stubborn tissue restrictions. This may make it easier for patients to stretch, exercise, and move without constant pulling or stiffness (Bend Total Body Chiropractic, 2023; TXMAC, n.d.-a).

Clinical Observations That Support an Integrative Approach

Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, has published clinical material that supports a whole-body view of flexibility and recovery. His work describes a model that combines chiropractic care with rehabilitation, functional medicine, and advanced treatment strategies to improve mobility, strength, and overall function (Dr. Alex Jimenez, 2026b).

His published material on shockwave therapy also explains how ESWT can fit into a broader care plan addressing both joint mechanics and soft-tissue healing. That kind of combined strategy is useful because many movement problems involve more than one tissue type. A patient may have joint restriction, muscle tension, tendon overload, and scar tissue simultaneously. A well-rounded plan is often needed to improve function in a lasting way (Dr. Alex Jimenez, 2026a).

For a clinic like ChiroMed, that kind of integrative thinking fits naturally with patient-centered care. Instead of chasing only symptoms, the focus is on why movement is limited and how to improve it safely and effectively.

What Patients May Notice With Consistent Care

When chiropractic care, stretching, therapeutic exercise, and ESWT are used together in the right setting, patients may notice:

  • Less stiffness in the morning
  • Easier movement during daily tasks
  • Better flexibility in the shoulders, hips, and back
  • Reduced muscle tightness
  • More comfort during walking, lifting, or exercise
  • Better posture and body awareness

These improvements often build over time. Flexibility is not something that changes only from one visit. It usually improves best through consistent care, home exercises, better posture, and regular movement.

Conclusion

Integrative chiropractic care helps the body stay flexible by restoring joint alignment, easing muscle tension, and improving nervous system function. When regular adjustments are combined with stretching and therapeutic exercises, patients may experience improved range of motion, reduced stiffness, and more efficient movement in daily life.

When ESWT is added, the treatment plan can become even more effective for people dealing with scar tissue, chronic tendon problems, and long-term muscle tightness. By addressing both joint mechanics and soft-tissue limitations, chiropractic care and ESWT work together to improve mobility, support healing, and help the body remain flexible and strong.

For a practice like ChiroMed, this integrative model reflects a practical, modern approach to supporting long-term movement, recovery, and function (San Diego NUCCA, n.d.; Dr. Alex Jimenez, 2026a).


References

Alter Chiropractic. (n.d.). Why choose chiropractic for enhanced flexibility?

Bend Total Body Chiropractic. (2023, October 25). Exploring the uses, benefits, side effects of shockwave therapy

Chiro Oklahoma City. (2025, October 25). What is shockwave therapy?

Chiropractic Experience. (n.d.). Shockwave therapy – ESWT

Chiropractic First. (n.d.). How shockwave therapy complements chiropractic treatments

Chiropractic Fitness. (n.d.). Boost mobility and flexibility with chiropractic care

Corrective Chiropractic. (n.d.). Shockwave therapy

Dr. Alex Jimenez. (2026a). Shockwave therapy for healing: Understanding ESWT

Dr. Alex Jimenez. (2026b). Why choose our clinical team?

Dubuque Chiropractic. (n.d.). 5 ways chiropractic adjustments enhance flexibility

Gentle Chiropractic. (2025, March 14). Can chiropractic care improve joint flexibility and range of motion?

Gentle Chiropractic. (n.d.). Frozen shoulder relief and treatment

Holistiq. (n.d.). Chiropractic treatment and shockwave treatment

InSpine Chiropractic. (n.d.). Shockwave therapy in chiropractic care

My Office Info. (n.d.). Why you should integrate shockwave therapy into your chiropractic care plan

OAA Orthopaedic Specialists. (n.d.). How regular chiropractic visits boost mobility

Rodgers Stein Chiropractic. (n.d.-a). Why thousands trust chiropractors for greater flexibility

Rodgers Stein Chiropractic. (n.d.-b). Transform your flexibility with chiropractic care

San Diego NUCCA. (n.d.). Shockwave therapy and chiropractic adjustments

ThinkVida. (n.d.). Chiropractic and flexibility

TXMAC. (n.d.-a). Why choose chiropractic for enhanced flexibility?

TXMAC. (n.d.-b). Boost mobility and flexibility with chiropractic care

Thrive Health Systems. (n.d.). How chiropractic adjustments can improve mobility and flexibility

What Happens If You Don’t Stretch Regularly

What Happens If You Don’t Stretch Regularly

What Happens If You Don’t Stretch Regularly

How Integrative Chiropractic + NP Care Can Help

Most people don’t skip stretching on purpose. Life gets busy. You sit, drive, work, cook, lift kids or groceries, and move through your day without thinking much about flexibility—until your body starts “talking.”

That “talking” can sound like:

  • “My neck feels stuck when I turn.”
  • “My lower back is tight every morning.”
  • “My hips feel stiff getting out of the car.”
  • “My hamstrings feel like guitar strings.”
  • “I’m not injured, but everything feels harder.”

While stretching is not magic, regular stretching (and basic mobility work) supports how your muscles, joints, and nervous system work together. When stretching is missing for a long time, muscles can feel tight and stiff, daily movement can feel less smooth, and your risk of strains can go up—especially when you suddenly ask your body to do something harder than usual. (Harvard Health Publishing, 2024; Mayo Clinic Staff, n.d.). Harvard Health+1

This article explains what can happen when you don’t stretch regularly, why stiffness builds over time, and how integrative chiropractic care plus a nurse practitioner (NP) can support better movement, comfort, and function—using a team-based, whole-person approach.


The Simple Truth: Your Body Adapts to What You Repeatedly Do

Your muscles and connective tissues adapt to your habits.

  • If you move often, you tend to maintain a usable range of motion.
  • If you stay still often, your body gets “good” at being still.
  • Some muscles may stay in shortened positions for hours on end if you spend a lot of time sitting or driving.

Stretching helps counter the “always in one position” problem. It’s one reason many medical and fitness education resources describe stretching as supportive for flexibility, joint range of motion, and daily function. (Harvard Health Publishing, 2024; Mayo Clinic Staff, n.d.). Harvard Health+1


What Muscle Stiffness Really Means (In Plain Language)

“Stiffness” is not just one thing. It can come from several common situations:

1) Too little movement for too long

After prolonged periods of minimal movement (such as sitting, bed rest, or low activity), muscles can feel tight and resistant. (Osmosis, n.d.). Osmosis

2) Doing “new” or harder activity than usual

When you do a new exercise or push harder than normal, you can create small amounts of muscle stress, which may lead to soreness and stiffness afterward—especially if you don’t train consistently. (Osmosis, n.d.). Osmosis

3) Hydration and electrolytes can matter

Electrolyte shifts after sweating can affect how muscles contract and how the nervous system communicates with muscles. That’s one reason hydration, nutrition, and recovery routines matter too. (Osmosis, n.d.). Osmosis


If You Don’t Stretch, Do Your Muscles “Shorten”?

You may have heard: “If you don’t stretch, your muscles will shorten.”

A helpful clarification is this:

  • For most people living a normal life, the bigger issue is that they become less mobile and less flexible, which can feel like shortening.
  • True physical shortening can occur in specific situations (such as prolonged immobilization), but in daily life, it’s more about stiffness, decreased mobility, and reduced tolerance for movement. (adidas, 2025). adidas

So the main risk is practical: movement feels harder, and your body has less “room” to move smoothly.


What Happens Over Time If You Rarely Stretch

When stretching and mobility are missing for weeks or months, several patterns are common.

You may notice a reduced range of motion

Range of motion is how far a joint can move comfortably. Many reputable health resources note that stretching can help joints move through a fuller range of motion and support everyday activity. (Mayo Clinic Staff, n.d.). Mayo Clinic

You may feel “tight,” then weaker in certain positions

Some muscles can become tight and less effective at lengthening when needed. This can alter your ability to squat, reach, rotate, and walk—particularly if you spend a significant amount of time seated. (Harvard Health Publishing, 2024). Harvard Health

Movement efficiency can drop

When your body can’t access normal ranges easily, it often compensates. You might twist through your lower back instead of your hips, shrug your shoulders instead of using your upper back, or flare your ribs instead of using your core. Over time, those compensation patterns can create nagging aches.

Daily tasks can feel harder

This is a big one. Many people don’t care about stretching until it affects real life:

  • Looking over your shoulder while driving
  • Bending to tie shoes
  • Reaching overhead in the kitchen
  • Carrying a child or lifting a box
  • Standing up from the couch without stiffness

Mayo Clinic notes that stretching can improve the ability to do daily activities and help muscles work more effectively. (Mayo Clinic Staff, n.d.). Mayo Clinic


How Not Stretching Can Increase Injury Risk

“Injury risk” doesn’t mean stretching prevents all injuries. It doesn’t.

But here’s the practical idea: tight, under-prepared tissues can be easier to strain when you suddenly demand more from them.

Harvard Health explains that without regular stretching, muscles can become tight and fail to extend fully during activity, increasing the risk of joint pain, strains, and muscle damage—especially during sudden, strenuous movement. (Harvard Health Publishing, 2024). Harvard Health

Other clinical and rehab-oriented sources also describe that lack of flexibility can contribute to shortened/tight muscles and a higher risk of strains or injury. (OA Orthopaedics, 2024; Aegis Physical Therapy, 2023). OADuluth+1

Common “high-risk moments” when people get hurt

  • Weekend yardwork after a week of sitting
  • Holiday lifting and carrying (boxes, decorations)
  • A rigorous workout after weeks off
  • A long drive followed by sudden activity
  • Rushing and moving fast with cold muscles

Flexibility vs. Mobility (Why Both Matter)

People mix these terms up:

  • Flexibility = how far a muscle can lengthen.
  • Mobility = how well you can control movement through a range (often involving joints + muscles + nervous system).

Mobility work typically involves controlled movements through various ranges, whereas stretching can be either held or dynamic. Many fitness education sources describe mobility as supporting a greater range of motion and improved movement quality. (Aaptiv, n.d.). Aaptiv

Real-life takeaway:
If you only stretch but never build control and strength, you may not “own” your range. If you only lift but never work on mobility, your range may slowly shrink.


Stretching Benefits People Commonly Notice

Different people feel different results, but common benefits include:

  • Feeling less stiff when waking up
  • Smoother movement getting up from a chair
  • Better body awareness (posture and alignment)
  • Easier walking, squatting, reaching, and rotating
  • Better comfort after workouts

Mayo Clinic lists potential benefits like improved range of motion, supporting joints through full motion, increasing muscle blood flow, and supporting daily activity. (Mayo Clinic Staff, n.d.). Mayo Clinic

Some educational resources also describe increased blood flow to tissues with stretching, which supports recovery. (Fitness for Paramedics, n.d.). eCampusOntario Pressbooks


The “Right Way” to Stretch (So You Don’t Make Things Worse)

Stretching is usually safe, but technique matters.

Basic stretching safety rules

Mayo Clinic offers clear, widely used safety tips, including warming up first and avoiding stretching cold muscles. (Mayo Clinic Staff, n.d.). Mayo Clinic

Use these practical guidelines:

  • Warm up first: 5–10 minutes of easy walking or light movement.
  • Go to mild tension, not pain.
  • Breathe: a slow exhale helps your nervous system “downshift.”
  • Be consistent: small daily work beats one long session once a week.
  • Use dynamic stretching before activity (gentle movement-based stretches).
  • Use longer holds after activity (when tissues are warm).

A quick “green light / yellow light / red light” check

Green light (okay):

  • mild pulling
  • warmth
  • gradual easing

Yellow light (slow down):

  • sharp pinch
  • tingling
  • You can’t breathe comfortably through it

Red light (stop and get checked):

  • numbness/weakness
  • worsening nerve symptoms down an arm/leg
  • severe pain, swelling, fever, or unexplained symptoms

A Simple Daily Stretch Routine (10 Minutes)

This is a basic, general routine that many people tolerate well. Modify for comfort.

Lower body (5 minutes)

  • Calf stretch (30 seconds each side)
  • Hamstring stretch (30 seconds each side)
  • Hip flexor stretch (30 seconds each side)
  • Glute/hip stretch (30 seconds each side)

Upper body (5 minutes)

  • Chest opener (30–45 seconds)
  • Upper back reach (30–45 seconds)
  • Neck gentle side stretch (20–30 seconds each side)
  • Thoracic rotation (open books) (5–8 reps each side)

Harvard Health specifically highlights calves, hamstrings, hip flexors, and quads, as well as shoulders, neck, and low back, as key areas for mobility-focused stretching. (Harvard Health Publishing, 2024). Harvard Health


When Stretching Alone Is Not Enough

If you have persistent stiffness or pain, the problem may not be, “you need to stretch more.” Other factors can drive stiffness, including:

  • Joint restriction or irritation
  • Overuse patterns
  • Poor recovery and sleep
  • Past injuries (especially whiplash, falls, sports injuries)
  • Underlying conditions (thyroid issues, inflammatory disorders, medication effects)
  • Nerve irritation

Osmosis notes that muscle stiffness can come from overuse, immobility, electrolyte issues, and also underlying medical conditions. (Osmosis, n.d.). Osmosis

That’s where integrative care can be useful: you get both a movement-focused approach and a medical lens to rule out deeper causes.


How Integrative Chiropractic Care Can Help (Beyond “Cracking”)

Integrative chiropractic care is not just about one adjustment. A comprehensive approach often includes:

  • Examining joint motion and movement patterns
  • Addressing areas of restriction and compensation
  • Manual care (when appropriate)
  • Soft-tissue strategies
  • Home mobility and strengthening plans
  • Ergonomic guidance (desk, driving, sleep posture)

Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC often emphasizes that people dealing with joint and muscle pain—especially after injury—benefit from keeping the body flexible and using stretching as part of a bigger plan to reduce flare-ups and support function. El Paso, TX Doctor Of Chiropractic

His clinical content also discusses that when muscles are stiff and strained, continuing to force movement can worsen discomfort and further reduce range of motion—and that care may include adjustments and soft-tissue work to support mobility and restore motion. El Paso, TX Doctor Of Chiropractic

Separately, many chiropractic education resources describe adjustments as targeted, controlled techniques used to support mobility and function. (WorkPartners MD, 2024). Work Partners, PLLC


What the Nurse Practitioner Adds (And Why It Matters)

A nurse practitioner (NP) brings medical assessment and management skills to the same movement problem. That matters because stiffness sometimes has medical drivers.

NPs can help by:

  • Taking a full health history (sleep, stress, medications, and past injuries)
  • Screening for red flags (infection, inflammatory disease, neurological changes)
  • Ordering or interpreting appropriate tests (labs or imaging when needed)
  • Managing pain safely (when medication is appropriate)
  • Coordinating referrals (PT, imaging, specialists)
  • Coaching lifestyle factors that affect pain and recovery

Healthgrades summarizes that NPs can evaluate problems, diagnose conditions, interpret diagnostic tests, and provide a wide range of treatments (state rules vary). (Prosser, 2025). Healthgrades Resources

The American Nurses Association describes APRNs as meeting advanced educational/clinical requirements and providing services ranging from primary and preventive care to other specialty services. (ANA, n.d.). ANA


The Power of the Team: Chiropractor + NP Working Together

When chiropractic care and NP care collaborate, it can help patients avoid “one-sided” care (only exercises, only medication, or only manual therapy).

A collaborative plan often looks like this

  • Step 1: Clear diagnosis and safety screening
    • Rule out serious causes of pain/stiffness
    • Identify nerve involvement, red flags, or systemic issues
      (Osmosis, n.d.; Prosser, 2025). Osmosis+1
  • Step 2: Restore motion safely
    • Joint and soft tissue approaches
    • Targeted mobility plan
      (Mayo Clinic Staff, n.d.; Jimenez, n.d.). Mayo Clinic+1
  • Step 3: Build strength to keep the motion
    • Strength + control so flexibility “sticks.”
    • Simple home program that matches your real life
  • Step 4: Reduce flare-ups
    • Work, driving, and sleep strategies
    • Recovery routines (hydration, stress, sleep)

What patients often like about integrative care

  • You don’t have to guess what’s “normal soreness” vs. a real problem.
  • You get a plan that fits both your body mechanics and your health history.
  • You can track progress with measurable goals (range of motion, function, pain levels).

A Practical Self-Check: Are You Dealing With “Stretching Stiffness” or Something Else?

Ask yourself:

  • Does stiffness improve after a warm shower or light movement?
  • Does it improve after 5–10 minutes of walking?
  • Is it worse after sitting for a long time?
  • Do you feel “stuck” more than “injured”?

If yes, you may be dealing with a mobility/flexibility + recovery issue.

But get checked sooner if you have:

  • Pain shooting down an arm/leg with numbness or weakness
  • New balance problems or frequent falls
  • Fever, unexplained weight loss, or severe fatigue with pain
  • Symptoms after a significant accident

Because stiffness can sometimes be linked to broader medical conditions, evaluation is important when symptoms are persistent or worsening. (Osmosis, n.d.). Osmosis


Key Takeaways

If you don’t stretch regularly, it’s common to develop:

  • Reduced flexibility and usable range of motion
  • More stiffness with sitting, driving, or long workdays
  • Less efficient movement patterns (more compensation)
  • Higher strain risk during sudden activity

Stretching is most helpful when it’s:

  • Regular and gentle
  • Paired with mobility and strength
  • Guided by your symptoms and medical history

Integrative chiropractic care and nurse practitioners can work together to:

  • Improve motion and comfort
  • Address joint and soft tissue restrictions
  • Screen for medical causes of stiffness
  • Build a realistic home plan that protects your body long-term
    (Mayo Clinic Staff, n.d.; Prosser, 2025; Jimenez, n.d.). Mayo Clinic+2Healthgrades Resources+2

Medical Disclaimer

This article is for educational purposes and is not medical advice. If you have severe pain, numbness, weakness, new neurological symptoms, or symptoms after a serious injury, seek urgent medical evaluation.


References

  • Advanced Practice Registered Nurses (APRN) — American Nurses Association. ANA
  • Add Stretching to Your Daily Routine to Improve Your Health — Aegis Physical Therapy. Aegis Physical Therapy
  • The Three Biggest Myths About Stretching — adidas (April 2025). adidas
  • Here’s How Different Methods of Mobility Affect Your Muscle Tone — Aaptiv. Aaptiv
  • The importance of stretching — Harvard Health Publishing (April 17, 2024). Harvard Health
  • Mobility Flexibility: El Paso, TX — Jimenez, A. (n.d.). El Paso, TX Doctor Of Chiropractic
  • Restore Range Of Motion With Chiropractic — Jimenez, A. (n.d.). El Paso, TX Doctor Of Chiropractic
  • Benefits of Flexibility and Stretching — Fitness for Paramedics (eCampusOntario Pressbooks). eCampusOntario Pressbooks
  • Stretching: Focus on flexibility — Mayo Clinic Staff. Mayo Clinic
  • Muscle Stiffness: What Is It, Causes, Treatment, and More — Osmosis. Osmosis
  • The Role Of Stretching And Flexibility Exercises — OA Orthopaedics (April 8, 2024). OADuluth
  • Treatments a Nurse Practitioner Can Provide — Prosser, A. (Updated July 23, 2025). Healthgrades Resources
  • Chiropractic Adjustments for Joint Health: Enhancing Mobility and Function — WorkPartners MD (January 5, 2024). Work Partners, PLLC