Designed for Edmonton athletes involved in armoured combat, historical European martial arts, and full-contact medieval sports, this service focuses on treating pain, restoring function, and supporting safe return to training after intense impacts, joint strain, and overuse injuries. Care is tailored to the realities of fighting in armour, repetitive weapon use, and high-force grappling, with an emphasis on evidence-based rehabilitation rather than generic sports care. If you are managing persistent pain or recovering from a specific injury, professional assessment and targeted treatment can help you train with more confidence and resilience.
Care begins with a detailed assessment of injury history, armour use, training habits, and movement patterns, followed by hands-on therapy such as joint mobilization or soft tissue techniques to address pain and restriction. This is combined with progressive rehabilitation exercises targeting stability, strength, and endurance relevant to weapon handling and grappling, often using clinical movement screening, therapeutic exercise protocols, and evidence-based physiotherapy and chiropractic methods aligned with Canadian practice standards.
Medieval combat places unique mechanical stresses on the body due to heavy protective equipment, asymmetrical weapon loading, and repeated high-impact collisions. These factors combine to increase injury risk beyond that seen in many modern sports, especially when training volume increases or recovery is limited.
Strikes absorbed through armour still transmit force to underlying joints, muscles, and connective tissue, commonly leading to shoulder contusions, rib dysfunction, spinal joint irritation, and deep muscle bruising that can alter movement patterns if not properly addressed.
Long-term use of swords, polearms, or shields often creates strength and mobility imbalances between sides of the body, contributing to elbow tendinopathy, wrist pain, and cervical or thoracic spine strain from repeated unilateral loading.
The added mass and limited mobility of armour change biomechanics, increasing stress on hips, knees, and the lower back during footwork, grappling, and takedowns, which can accelerate joint irritation or exacerbate pre-existing weaknesses.
Many fighters continue training despite pain to avoid missing events, raising the risk of compensatory injuries, prolonged inflammation, and delayed healing that can ultimately reduce performance and longevity in the sport.
Working with a qualified provider who understands combat sport demands helps reduce pain, restore joint mobility, rebuild sport-specific strength, and improve load tolerance under armour, leading to more efficient movement and lower re-injury risk during sparring and competition.
Timelines vary depending on injury severity, tissue type, and training demands, but many athletes notice meaningful improvement within a few weeks when treatment is paired with modified training and structured rehabilitation.
In many cases, yes, although adjustments to intensity, armour use, or specific techniques may be recommended to protect healing tissues and prevent setbacks.
This approach accounts for the unique loads, equipment, and impact patterns of medieval combat sports, making treatment and rehab more relevant than generalized athletic care.
Athletes often ask about cost, commitment, and expectations, and while fees depend on assessment and treatment needs, the focus is on efficient care that supports long-term performance rather than short-term symptom relief. Prior medical imaging or diagnoses can be helpful but are not required, and clear communication about goals, competition schedules, and pain levels helps ensure care aligns with your training reality.