Targeted physiotherapy care for people in Edmonton dealing with hamstring pain, sudden pulls, or lingering tightness that limits walking, running, sitting, or work activities. This service focuses on calming pain, restoring normal movement, and helping the muscle heal properly so you can return to daily life and sport with confidence and less risk of re‑injury. Book an assessment to understand what is driving your pain and what recovery can realistically look like.
Hamstring strains affect the muscles at the back of the thigh and can range from mild overstretching to partial tearing. Pain often feels sharp during activity and stiff or weak afterward, making even simple movements uncomfortable. Without proper assessment and loading guidance, these injuries can linger, recur, or worsen over time.
Hamstrings are especially vulnerable during rapid acceleration, deceleration, or kicking because they lengthen while contracting. This high-load mechanism commonly leads to microscopic muscle fibre damage or larger tears, particularly if the tissue is fatigued or not conditioned for the demand.
Persistent tightness after a strain often reflects protective muscle guarding, altered nerve sensitivity, or incomplete tissue healing rather than simple stiffness. Stretching alone may aggravate symptoms if the underlying capacity of the muscle has not been rebuilt.
Resuming sport or heavy work before strength, control, and running mechanics are restored can overload healing tissue. This is a major reason hamstring strains have a high recurrence rate when rehab is rushed or poorly progressed.
Ongoing hamstring dysfunction can change how you move, placing extra strain on the pelvis, hip, or lower back. Over time, this compensation may contribute to secondary pain or reduced performance beyond the original injury site.
Working with a qualified physiotherapist helps reduce pain, restore normal muscle function, and rebuild strength in a structured way. Care focuses on improving load tolerance, coordination, and confidence so daily activities, work demands, and sport feel safer and more predictable. The outcome is not just short-term relief, but a more resilient hamstring that supports long-term movement health.
Care begins with a detailed assessment of your injury history, pain behaviour, movement patterns, and strength. Your physiotherapist may assess gait, hip and pelvic control, and neural tension to understand contributing factors. Treatment commonly includes guided loading exercises, progressive strengthening through lengthened positions, manual therapy for symptom relief, and education on activity modification. Rehabilitation is progressed using evidence-informed principles for muscle healing and return to function, adjusted to your goals and tolerance.
Recovery timelines vary depending on the severity of the strain, prior injuries, and activity demands. Mild strains may improve within a few weeks, while more significant tears often require several months of progressive rehabilitation to return safely to higher-level activity.
In many cases, imaging is not required to begin physiotherapy. A thorough physical assessment can usually identify the nature and severity of the strain. Imaging may be recommended if symptoms are severe, worsening, or not responding as expected.
Appropriately selected and dosed exercise is a key part of recovery and is generally safe, even when some pain is present. Your physiotherapist will guide you on what level of discomfort is acceptable and how to progress without overloading healing tissue.
People often want to know about cost, visit frequency, and whether they can continue working or training. Care plans are tailored to your goals, injury severity, and schedule, with clear guidance on home exercises and activity limits. Many clients can stay active with modifications while healing, and your physiotherapist will explain each stage so you understand the purpose behind the treatment and what progress should look like.