How we approach sports injuries.
Sports medicine isn't a slogan — it's a body of evidence about how soft tissue heals, what rehab loads do to a graft, and when an injured athlete should return to load. We treat the whole arc, from the first MRI to the day you take the field again.
Most cases get better without surgery. When surgery is the right answer, we lean on arthroscopic technique whenever possible — smaller incisions, faster recovery, and a rehab plan built around your sport, not a brochure.
Imaging gets read in the room with you. Treatment plans include explicit timelines, criteria for progression, and what to do if you're not hitting them.
Who this is for.
- Athletes recovering from a knee, shoulder, or hip injury
- Active adults whose pain has interrupted training or competition
- Patients seeking a second opinion before sports surgery
- Anyone with a non-resolving overuse injury after months of conservative care
Philosophy.
An athlete is not a recreational version of a patient — they are a patient with a deadline. Recovery should be planned that way: criterion-based, conservative where the tissue demands it, aggressive where the evidence supports it.