Serious training demands serious care. At Performance Chiropractor + Physiotherapy in Edmonton, we help strength athletes overcome barbell-related injuries, reduce pain, and return to lifting with confidence through targeted assessment, hands-on treatment, and structured rehab built around your sport. If squats, deadlifts, presses, or Olympic lifts are aggravating your back, shoulders, hips, or knees, our integrated approach is designed to address the root cause and guide you safely back under the bar—book an assessment to start your recovery.
Your care begins with a detailed history of training volume, technique, and injury onset, followed by a movement assessment that includes squat, hinge, press, and pull patterns as appropriate. We evaluate joint mobility, strength asymmetries, motor control, and pain response to loading. Treatment may include joint mobilization or manipulation when indicated, soft tissue therapy, and evidence-informed modalities to reduce pain and restore range. The cornerstone is progressive exercise rehabilitation: isometric loading for irritated tendons, tempo and positional work to rebuild control, and graded exposure to barbell lifts. We align with current clinical guidelines for musculoskeletal care and collaborate within our physiotherapy and chiropractic team to ensure safe, measurable progression back to sport.
Barbell training places high mechanical loads on the spine and extremities. While lifting is safe and effective when programmed well, repetitive strain, technical breakdown under fatigue, mobility restrictions, and rapid load progression can exceed tissue capacity. Over time, this mismatch between load and tolerance leads to pain, inflammation, and compensatory movement patterns that limit performance and increase reinjury risk.
Increases in volume, intensity, or frequency that outpace tissue adaptation are a leading driver of overuse injuries. Sudden jumps in squat depth, deadlift volume, or pressing frequency can overload tendons and joint structures, resulting in conditions such as patellar tendinopathy, lumbar facet irritation, or rotator cuff strain. A structured assessment helps identify where load exceeded capacity and how to reintroduce it safely.
Even small changes in bar path, bracing strategy, or hip-knee sequencing can shift stress to vulnerable tissues. For example, lumbar flexion under heavy deadlifts increases disc and ligament stress, while excessive forward knee travel without hip control can aggravate the patellar tendon. Identifying these mechanical faults allows us to correct them through targeted cueing and motor control retraining.
Limited ankle dorsiflexion, restricted thoracic extension, or reduced hip internal rotation often force compensations during squats and Olympic lifts. Conversely, insufficient core or scapular stability may lead to shoulder impingement or recurrent low back pain. Addressing joint mobility and segmental stability together reduces abnormal stress on overloaded structures.
Resuming maximal lifts before tissues have regained strength and tolerance increases the risk of flare-ups and chronic pain. Tendons and ligaments remodel gradually, and pain reduction alone does not equal readiness. A progressive rehabilitation plan ensures objective strength and control benchmarks are met before full return to sport.
Working with a provider who understands strength sports means your rehab is built around squats, deadlifts, presses, and Olympic lifts—not generic exercises. You can expect a clear diagnosis, reduced pain through appropriate manual therapy and load modification, restoration of joint mobility and strength, and a phased return-to-lifting plan with specific benchmarks. The goal is not only symptom relief but improved movement efficiency, greater tissue resilience, and confidence under load so you can train consistently in Edmonton’s competitive strength community.
Timelines depend on the tissue involved, severity, and how consistently you follow the plan. Mild strains may settle within a few weeks, while tendon or disc-related issues often require a longer graded loading phase. We outline expected phases of recovery and use objective markers such as strength symmetry, pain response, and movement quality to guide progression rather than guessing.
In most cases, complete rest is unnecessary and can delay recovery. We modify rather than eliminate training, adjusting load, range of motion, tempo, or exercise selection to maintain conditioning while protecting irritated tissues. Strategic deloading combined with targeted rehab supports healing without significant loss of strength.
When delivered after a thorough assessment and combined with active rehabilitation, chiropractic techniques are safe for most athletes. We select methods based on your presentation and integrate them with exercise therapy, education, and load management to ensure care supports your performance goals.
Expect a collaborative, sport-specific approach focused on measurable progress. Initial visits typically involve assessment and early pain management, followed by structured rehab sessions and clear home programming. Costs vary depending on visit frequency and complexity, and we discuss this transparently at the outset. If you are an Edmonton athlete dealing with lifting-related pain, early assessment improves outcomes and reduces time away from training—reach out to determine whether this focused care is right for you.