If hip pain is limiting how you walk, sleep, work, or stay active, this service is designed to help you move with less pain and more confidence. At Performance Chiropractic + Physiotherapy in Edmonton, care focuses on identifying the true source of hip discomfort and restoring function through evidence-based physiotherapy, not quick fixes. Treatment is tailored for people dealing with ongoing pain, recent injuries, or movement restrictions, with the goal of helping you return safely to daily life and the activities you value. Book an assessment to understand what is driving your pain and what can be done about it.
Hip pain is often complex because the hip joint works closely with the lower back, pelvis, and knees. Pain may start gradually or after an injury, and without proper assessment it can persist or worsen over time. Understanding the underlying causes and risks helps determine when professional physiotherapy is appropriate and why early, targeted care matters.
Conditions such as osteoarthritis, labral irritation, or early cartilage wear can cause deep hip or groin pain that worsens with walking, standing, or stairs. These issues are influenced by joint loading, alignment, and movement patterns, and unmanaged stress can lead to stiffness, reduced range of motion, and increasing pain.
Tendinopathies and muscle strains around the hip, including the gluteal and hip flexor muscles, often develop from repetitive use, sudden increases in activity, or prolonged sitting. Without proper loading and recovery, tissues may become painful and weak, affecting balance and walking efficiency.
Not all hip pain originates in the hip joint itself. Lumbar spine or sacroiliac joint dysfunction can refer pain to the hip or outer thigh, making self-diagnosis unreliable. Treating only the painful area without addressing contributing regions may delay recovery.
When hip pain alters how you move, other joints often compensate. Over time this can contribute to knee pain, low back strain, or reduced mobility. Persistent compensation patterns increase the risk of chronic pain and make future recovery more challenging.
Working with a qualified physiotherapist provides a structured path to reducing pain, improving strength, and restoring normal movement. Care is based on how your hip actually functions, not just where it hurts, leading to more reliable and sustainable outcomes for daily activities, work demands, and recreation.
Physiotherapy begins with a detailed assessment of hip mobility, strength, gait, and contributing factors from the spine and lower limbs. Treatment may include manual therapy to address joint or soft tissue restrictions, progressive exercise to improve strength and load tolerance, and education on activity modification. Clinicians use evidence-informed approaches and reassess progress regularly, adjusting the plan as your hip function improves.
Timelines vary depending on the cause of pain, how long symptoms have been present, and individual health factors. Some people notice improvement within a few sessions, while longer-standing or degenerative conditions may require a more gradual, multi-week approach focused on strength and movement retraining.
In many cases, imaging such as X-rays or MRI is not required initially. A thorough physical assessment can identify functional issues and guide treatment. Imaging may be recommended if progress is limited or if specific red flags are identified.
Physiotherapy is often recommended before considering surgery and can sometimes delay or reduce the need for it. Even when surgery is planned, improving hip strength and mobility beforehand can support better post-surgical outcomes.
People often wonder about cost, session frequency, and whether treatment will be painful. Physiotherapy is typically structured around clear goals and reassessed regularly, with costs reflecting time and clinical expertise rather than a one-size-fits-all program. Exercises and hands-on techniques are chosen to be tolerable and progressive, aiming to reduce pain rather than push through it. If hip pain is affecting your quality of life, an assessment can clarify whether this service is appropriate and what a realistic plan would look like.