Sports injuries require specialized care that not only treats the injury but gets you back to peak performance. Our regenerative approach accelerates healing and reduces recovery time. Our clinic is conveniently located near Phoenix in Chandler, AZ, offering patients from Phoenix access to advanced, non-surgical treatment options.
Phoenix patients usually reach our office in 25–40 minutes depending on origin, most commonly via the I-10 east to the Loop 202 or the Loop 101 to the 202. Phoenix patients most often come to us from Arcadia, Biltmore, and Ahwatukee Foothills — typically active 35–60-year-olds dealing with hiking and running overuse injuries, plus a meaningful share seeking hormone optimization and integrative care.
Hiking at Camelback Mountain, Piestewa Peak, and South Mountain; road and trail running out of Arcadia and the Biltmore; a growing CrossFit, climbing, and Pilates scene; and a strong endurance-sports and outdoor-recreation culture city-wide. South Mountain Park is one of the largest municipal parks in the country.
We regularly see patients from Arcadia, Biltmore, Central Corridor, Desert Ridge, and Ahwatukee Foothills.
Sports injury patients typically present in three patterns: (1) recreational and masters-age athletes 35–60 with overuse tendinopathies that haven't resolved with rest; (2) weekend warriors with acute injuries — partial tendon strains, ligament sprains, joint flares — who want a more active treatment plan than wait-and-see; and (3) competitive amateurs and post-college athletes balancing training load with chronic issues.
Patients from Phoenix benefit from a short drive (about 25 minutes) to our Chandler clinic for comprehensive sports injury care.
Most running injuries are training-load issues; we treat the tissue and adjust the training plan, not just the symptom.
Tendon and joint flares in lifters often respond to a combination of mechanics work and targeted regenerative care.
Tennis, pickleball, and basketball injuries we see most often involve elbow, shoulder, knee, and Achilles tendinopathy.
We see overuse injuries in young athletes from Gilbert and Chandler club programs — load management is often as important as treatment.
Regenerative injection therapy and shockwave both have growing evidence for chronic tendon injuries and select ligament conditions, with stronger data for some indications (lateral epicondylosis, plantar fasciitis, knee OA) than others. We're upfront about which conditions have robust evidence and which are more individualized.
Pain that lasts more than 2–3 weeks, symptoms that are getting worse instead of better, swelling that won't resolve, or any acute mechanism with significant pain or instability should be evaluated. Waiting too long can turn a fixable problem into a chronic one.
Many tendon injuries become chronic because the body's healing response stalls — the tissue stops cycling through normal repair. PRP is intended to restart and amplify that healing biology, particularly for chronic tendinopathy that hasn't responded to rest and rehab.
Not always. In-office musculoskeletal ultrasound can diagnose a large fraction of soft-tissue injuries directly and lets us inject under image guidance. We use MRI when we need detail beyond what ultrasound provides or when surgical decision-making is on the table.
Return-to-sport timing is sport-specific and injury-specific. Most patients follow a graded return rather than a hard date, with criteria like pain, range of motion, strength, and sport-specific drills determining readiness.
We treat the underlying problem, not just symptoms.
Your treatment plan is based on what works, not what's covered.
Phoenix patients usually reach our office in 25–40 minutes depending on origin, most commonly via the I-10 east to the Loop 202 or the Loop 101 to the 202.
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.