Targeted rehab for Edmonton lacrosse athletes dealing with pain, setbacks, or performance loss after injury. This service focuses on getting you back to play safely by addressing the real mechanical causes of injury, restoring strength and confidence, and reducing the risk of re‑injury through structured, sport‑specific care—book an assessment to start moving forward.
Care begins with a detailed assessment of injury history, movement quality, strength, and on-field demands. Treatment may include manual therapy to address joint and soft tissue restrictions, progressive strengthening, neuromuscular control drills, and return-to-play testing. Rehabilitation is guided by evidence-based principles, load management strategies, and functional benchmarks relevant to lacrosse rather than generic fitness goals.
Lacrosse places unique physical demands on the body, combining high-speed running, sudden directional changes, stick handling, contact, and repetitive shooting mechanics. Without rehab designed around these demands, injuries can linger or recur, limiting performance and increasing long-term risk.
Frequent cutting, pivoting, and sprinting place high loads on the ankles, knees, hips, and groin. When tissues are overloaded or poorly conditioned, athletes may develop sprains, strains, or tendinopathies that worsen if return-to-play decisions are rushed.
Body contact and stick checks can lead to shoulder injuries, rib pain, spinal strains, and concussions. Poor force absorption or underlying mobility restrictions can amplify the impact of collisions, delaying recovery without structured rehabilitation.
High-volume shooting and passing stress the shoulders, elbows, wrists, and core. Imbalances in strength or movement control often lead to overuse injuries such as rotator cuff irritation or elbow pain when mechanics are not corrected.
Returning to play before full tissue healing and neuromuscular control increases the likelihood of compensations, chronic pain, and repeat injury, particularly during tournament play or condensed schedules.
Working with a qualified rehab provider helps athletes reduce pain, restore joint mobility, rebuild strength, and retrain sport-specific movement patterns. The outcome is not only a safer return to play but improved stability, confidence, and efficiency during running, shooting, and contact situations.
Timelines depend on the type and severity of injury, training age, and competition schedule. Acute strains may improve in weeks, while ligament or overuse injuries often require a longer, staged rehab process focused on tissue healing and gradual load progression.
In many cases, rehab can begin without imaging, using clinical assessment to guide care. Imaging may be recommended if symptoms suggest more serious structural injury or if progress stalls despite appropriate treatment.
Yes, addressing strength deficits, movement patterns, and workload management reduces the risk of repeat injuries by improving how the body handles the demands of lacrosse.
Athletes often ask about cost, scheduling around practices, and whether rehab can continue in-season. Care is typically tailored to fit training demands, with frequency adjusted based on injury severity and competitive phase. Consistent attendance and adherence to home exercises play a major role in outcomes, making professional guidance a worthwhile investment for long-term performance and durability.