Competitive and recreational swimmers in Edmonton face unique demands on their shoulders, spine, hips, and knees, often training thousands of repetitive strokes each week. Our focused chiropractic and rehab care is designed for athletes dealing with pain, overuse injuries, and stalled performance, combining precise assessment with sport-specific treatment and corrective exercise so you can return to the pool stronger and more efficient. If your training is limited by shoulder pain, low back tightness, or persistent overuse symptoms, our team is ready to help you move forward with a clear, evidence-informed plan.
Your care begins with a detailed history of training volume, stroke specialization, and symptom behaviour, followed by a physical assessment of shoulder, spine, hip, and knee mechanics. We evaluate range of motion, strength, motor control, and load tolerance to identify the mechanical faults contributing to tissue overload. Treatment may include precise joint mobilization or manipulation where appropriate, soft tissue therapy to address tone and adhesions, and a structured corrective exercise plan focused on scapular stability, rotator cuff endurance, hip control, and trunk strength. We use progressive loading principles similar to those applied in sport rehabilitation, adjusting intensity and complexity as your tolerance improves. Communication around swim programming, rest intervals, and cross-training ensures your return to full training is gradual and strategic rather than rushed.
Swimming appears low impact, but the repetitive overhead motion, high training volumes, and technical demands create predictable stress patterns. When joint mechanics, muscle balance, and workload are not aligned, tissues become overloaded faster than they can recover, leading to pain, inflammation, and performance decline.
“Swimmer’s shoulder” typically results from repetitive overhead rotation combined with subtle scapular control deficits and thoracic spine stiffness. When the shoulder blade does not upwardly rotate and posteriorly tilt effectively, the rotator cuff and biceps tendon absorb excess load, increasing the risk of tendinopathy or impingement. High yardage, paddles, and sudden spikes in training volume further elevate tendon stress without adequate adaptation time.
Butterfly and breaststroke demand repeated lumbar extension and rotation. If hip extension or thoracic mobility is restricted, the lower back compensates, leading to facet joint irritation or muscular strain. Core endurance deficits can also reduce trunk control during turns and underwater phases, allowing cumulative micro-stress to build into persistent pain.
The whip kick in breaststroke places significant valgus and rotational stress on the medial knee. Limited hip internal rotation or weak hip adductors and external rotators shift load into the knee joint and surrounding ligaments. Over time, this can result in medial knee pain, adductor strain, or hip impingement symptoms.
Continuing to train through pain often alters stroke mechanics, which redistributes force to other tissues and creates secondary injuries. What begins as mild tendon irritation can progress to chronic tendinopathy, prolonged time out of the water, and reduced power output off the wall or during sprint efforts.
Working with a clinician who understands the biomechanics of swimming means treatment is directed at the true driver of your symptoms rather than just temporary pain relief. By improving joint mobility where it is restricted, enhancing scapular and core control, and progressively loading tendons to build resilience, athletes often experience reduced pain during sets, better stroke efficiency, and more confident race preparation. Care is coordinated around your training schedule so you can maintain conditioning while addressing the root cause of the problem.
Recovery timelines depend on the tissue involved, severity, and how early treatment begins. Mild tendon irritation may settle within a few weeks with load modification and targeted rehab, while longer-standing tendinopathy can require several months of progressive strengthening. We provide a realistic timeline after assessment and adjust as you respond to care.
In most cases, complete rest is not necessary. Instead, we modify volume, intensity, or specific strokes to reduce aggravating load while maintaining fitness. The goal is to keep you active in the pool where possible, using pain and tissue response as guides.
When performed by a qualified professional and integrated with active rehabilitation, manual therapy is a safe and evidence-informed component of musculoskeletal care. Techniques are selected based on your presentation, comfort level, and performance goals, with an emphasis on restoring function rather than relying on passive treatment alone.
Athletes often ask about cost, referrals, and what to expect at the first visit. Fees vary depending on assessment length and treatment complexity, and a referral is typically not required to begin care. Your first session includes a comprehensive evaluation and initial treatment, along with a clear plan outlining visit frequency, home exercises, and return-to-swim guidelines. Our focus at Performance Chiropractor + Physiotherapy in Edmonton is to provide transparent recommendations, measurable progress markers, and a collaborative approach that supports both pain relief and long-term performance.