Targeted care for people in Edmonton living with sharp or aching spine pain that worsens with movement, this service focuses on calming irritated facet joints, restoring controlled motion, and helping you get back to daily activities with confidence; if back or neck pain is limiting your life, a structured physiotherapy approach can help you move forward.
Facet joint pain arises from small stabilizing joints at the back of the spine that guide movement and bear load; when these joints become irritated, swollen, or mechanically stressed, pain can become persistent and misleading, often mimicking disc or muscle problems and requiring a careful, mechanism-based assessment.
Repetitive loading, prolonged sitting, previous injuries, or age-related changes can increase compressive forces through the facet joints, leading to cartilage irritation and local inflammation that triggers pain during extension, rotation, or prolonged standing.
When facet joints are sensitized, the nervous system may limit motion as a protective response, causing stiffness, guarded movement, and reduced tolerance for work, driving, sleep positions, and recreational activities.
Without proper care, people often compensate with poor movement patterns, increasing strain on discs and muscles and raising the risk of recurrent flare-ups, reduced spinal mobility, and chronic pain cycles.
General stretching or rest may temporarily reduce discomfort but does not address joint mechanics, load tolerance, or neuromuscular control, which are essential for lasting improvement in facet-related conditions.
With a qualified provider, care aims to reduce joint irritation, restore controlled spinal movement, and rebuild strength and endurance around the affected area, leading to improved function, reduced pain intensity, greater confidence with movement, and a clearer plan to prevent recurrence.
Care begins with a detailed history and physical examination to differentiate facet involvement from disc, nerve, or muscular sources, followed by a tailored plan that may include manual joint mobilization, graded exercise therapy, motor control retraining, and education on posture and load management, all guided by evidence-informed physiotherapy standards and adjusted based on your response.
Many people notice early changes in pain or mobility within a few sessions, but meaningful and lasting improvement typically develops over several weeks as joint tolerance, strength, and movement patterns are progressively rebuilt.
Imaging such as X-ray or MRI is not always required, as facet joint dysfunction is often identified through clinical assessment; a physiotherapist will advise if medical imaging or referral is appropriate based on your presentation.
This service is commonly used for both recent and long-standing symptoms, with programs adapted to respect pain sensitivity, previous injuries, and overall health while focusing on gradual, sustainable progress.
People often wonder about cost, session frequency, and whether movement will worsen pain; physiotherapy is typically structured in phases with clear goals, transparent recommendations, and close monitoring so care remains appropriate, manageable, and aligned with your recovery priorities.