Shoulder pain can make everyday activities like reaching, lifting, and sleeping incredibly difficult. Our regenerative approach targets the damaged tissue directly, promoting natural healing without surgery. Our clinic is conveniently located near Tempe in Chandler, AZ, offering patients from Tempe access to advanced, non-surgical treatment options.
Tempe residents reach our Chandler office in 15–20 minutes via the Loop 101 Price Freeway or Rural Road / McClintock Drive. Tempe sends us a higher-than-average share of endurance athletes — runners, cyclists, triathletes — along with younger professionals dealing with overuse injuries and ASU-affiliated recreational athletes.
Running and cycling along Tempe Town Lake, the Rio Salado Path, and South Mountain access points; triathlon training out of Kiwanis Park; a busy ASU recreational and club sports scene; and a strong CrossFit and lifting culture in the central Tempe gyms. Tempe regularly hosts Ironman 70.3 Arizona and major running events.
We regularly see patients from Warner Ranch, The Lakes, Maple-Ash, Mitchell Park, and Downtown Tempe.
Shoulder pain patients in our clinic generally fall into three archetypes: (1) overhead athletes and lifters 25–50 with rotator cuff or labral irritation; (2) golfers and tennis/pickleball players 40–65 with chronic cuff tendinopathy; and (3) 50+ adults with partial-thickness cuff tears or adhesive capsulitis who want to avoid surgical repair.
Patients from Tempe benefit from a short drive (about 15 minutes) to our Chandler clinic for comprehensive shoulder pain care.
Pressing and overhead movements are usually the first thing we modify; most lifters can keep training the lower body and posterior chain through rehab.
Lead-shoulder pain at the top of the backswing is a classic cuff-and-labrum pattern and often responds well to ultrasound-guided injection and rehab.
Serving and overhead shots drive most shoulder complaints we see in court-sport players from Gilbert and Scottsdale.
Repetitive freestyle and butterfly strokes provoke cuff and biceps tendon irritation; stroke-mechanics work is often as important as the injection.
PRP for chronic rotator cuff tendinopathy has moderate evidence supporting symptom and function improvement, particularly when combined with structured rehab. The evidence is weaker for full-thickness tears, where surgical consultation should be part of the decision.
Many partial-thickness cuff tears can be managed non-surgically with a combination of targeted rehab, load management, and regenerative injections. Full-thickness retracted tears in younger active patients are usually still surgical, which is why imaging and a careful exam matter.
Steroid injections reduce inflammation quickly but can weaken tendon tissue with repeated use. PRP is intended to support tendon healing rather than just suppress inflammation, and is generally a better fit for chronic tendinopathy.
Night pain in the shoulder is most often driven by rotator cuff pathology or bursitis — laying on the affected side compresses the subacromial space and irritates already-inflamed tissue. Persistent night pain is one of the more reliable signs that imaging is warranted.
Most patients follow a graded 6–12 week rehab progression after PRP, with noticeable improvement often beginning around weeks 4–6. Full return to overhead sport or heavy lifting is usually in the 3–4 month window.
We treat the underlying problem, not just symptoms.
Your treatment plan is based on what works, not what's covered.
Tempe residents reach our Chandler office in 15–20 minutes via the Loop 101 Price Freeway or Rural Road / McClintock Drive.
Led by Dr. Kelly Romero, NMD, with a team of specialists.
Book a free 30-minute consultation. We'll review your history, discuss your goals, and recommend the right treatment plan.