Pre and Post-Surgery Rehabilitation
At Back in Motion® Physical Therapy we want you to have the best recovery possible. Studies have shown an increased success rate with rehabilitation when you complete a physical therapy program prior to surgery.
Our Pre and
Post-Surgical Rehab is ideal for
- Total joint replacement surgery — Shoulder, reverse shoulder, hip, knee, partial knee.
- Shoulder surgery — including rotator cuff repair, arthroscopic shoulder surgery for shoulder instability, dislocation, shoulder impingement, torn labrum, and arthritis.
- Spine surgery — including laminectomy, laminotomy, fusions, disc replacement and scoliosis correction.
- Hip surgery — including arthroscopic labral repairs, fracture repairs.
- Knee surgery — including ACL repair, arthroscopic surgery for meniscal repair, meniscectomy, MCL or LCL repair, osteotomy and arthritis.
- Ankle and foot surgery — including post-fracture surgery, fusions, bunionectomy, achilles tendon repair, neuroma removal, plantar fascia repair.
We have center and branch locations in Gorham, South Portland, Portland, Newport, Brewer, Waterville and Auburn, Maine to better serve your needs.
Pre and Post-Surgery Rehabilitation
Pain in your wrist and hand? These three issues could be responsible
Feeling pain in one part of your body can be difficult to deal with. People who are feeling pain in two or more body parts can have even more difficulty going about their daily routine. This is especially true if they’re feeling pain in their wrist and hand. It’s not...
Why is your physical therapist showing you golfer’s elbow exercises?
Your physical therapist has examined your painful elbow, and they have determined that you have golfer’s elbow. Then, they proceed to create a treatment plan for you that includes golfer’s elbow exercises, which confuses you a bit. Didn’t moving your elbow too much...
Benefits of standing: Three reasons physical therapists recommend you stand more
What comes to your mind when you think about someone working hard? For many people, it is likely an image of someone sitting at a desk pounding away at a keyboard. This image has become so ingrained in us that we often think of people who are idle as “just standing...