
Post-surgical Orthopedic Rehabilitation
Post-surgical orthopedic rehabilitation is commonly ordered after orthopedic surgery to help relieve pain, increase motion, reduce swelling, and gain function. Our physical therapists create individualized therapy plans using the right amount and type of exercise to challenge patients, while at the same time, help to build up to the maximal level of physical activity. Learn More!
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Range of Motion Therapy
Range of motion therapy is an important part of physical rehabilitation. Range of motion therapy is used to move a joint to its furthest natural degree possible. It is helpful for keeping muscles at their proper length, improving circulation, reducing pain, decreasing swelling, and promoting natural movement patterns. Our physical therapists provide hands-on passive range of motion, active assistive range of motion, and teach patients to perform range of motion exercises with supervision or independently.
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Scoliosis Treatment
Scoliosis is an abnormal side to side curvature of the spine that can become worse over time. Physical therapy can help with basic activities, such as sitting balance, endurance, standing, and walking by using exercises to build strength and maintain posture. Learn More!
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Strapping
Strapping with therapy tape is used to provide support and stability, as well as prevent re-injury to injured or unstable joints between physical therapy treatments. Strapping can aide in the overall recovery of injured and unstable neck, trunk, arm, or leg joints.
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Strength Training
Progressive strengthening is used in rehabilitation to increase muscle strength, tone, size, and function. Progressive strengthening exercises build up muscles by gradually increasing the amount of weight or resistance that is used while exercising. Strength training is part of a physical rehabilitation program following injury, disease, neurological disorders, bed rest, or inactivity. Learn More!
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Therapeutic Activities
Therapeutic activities use practical functional activities to build on skills learned in physical therapy. Therapeutic activities can help improve functional performance in a progressive manner and focus on gaining motion, strength, balance, or coordination.
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Therapeutic Exercise
Therapeutic exercise is done gently and without pain to increase pain free movements, joint mobility, flexibility, strength, endurance, and overall functional levels, as well as to prevent injury. Our therapists provide hands-on or total assistance for movements until a patient has gained the ability to perform movements independently with or without supervision.
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Vibration Therapy
Vibration Therapy is a form of neuromuscular re-education that uses vibration to cause painless very high frequency muscle contractions, thereby enhancing the patient’s ability to efficiently recruit muscle fibers, coordinate movements being performed by joints and muscle tissue and reduce the typical post-injury mechanical dysfunction that typically occurs.
Go to Rehabilitation - Page 1
Request an appointment online or call our office at (845) 764-9089.
Photo Credit, top: Forever Moments Photography

Post-surgical Orthopedic Rehabilitation
Post-surgical orthopedic rehabilitation is commonly ordered after orthopedic surgery to help relieve pain, increase motion, reduce swelling, and gain function. Our physical therapists create individualized therapy plans using the right amount and type of exercise to challenge patients, while at the same time, help to build up to the maximal level of physical activity. Learn More!
Back to Top
Range of Motion Therapy
Range of motion therapy is an important part of physical rehabilitation. Range of motion therapy is used to move a joint to its furthest natural degree possible. It is helpful for keeping muscles at their proper length, improving circulation, reducing pain, decreasing swelling, and promoting natural movement patterns. Our physical therapists provide hands-on passive range of motion, active assistive range of motion, and teach patients to perform range of motion exercises with supervision or independently.
Back to Top
Scoliosis Treatment
Scoliosis is an abnormal side to side curvature of the spine that can become worse over time. Physical therapy can help with basic activities, such as sitting balance, endurance, standing, and walking by using exercises to build strength and maintain posture. Learn More!
Back to Top
Strapping
Strapping with therapy tape is used to provide support and stability, as well as prevent re-injury to injured or unstable joints between physical therapy treatments. Strapping can aide in the overall recovery of injured and unstable neck, trunk, arm, or leg joints.
Back to Top
Strength Training
Progressive strengthening is used in rehabilitation to increase muscle strength, tone, size, and function. Progressive strengthening exercises build up muscles by gradually increasing the amount of weight or resistance that is used while exercising. Strength training is part of a physical rehabilitation program following injury, disease, neurological disorders, bed rest, or inactivity. Learn More!
Back to Top
Therapeutic Activities
Therapeutic activities use practical functional activities to build on skills learned in physical therapy. Therapeutic activities can help improve functional performance in a progressive manner and focus on gaining motion, strength, balance, or coordination.
Back to Top
Therapeutic Exercise
Therapeutic exercise is done gently and without pain to increase pain free movements, joint mobility, flexibility, strength, endurance, and overall functional levels, as well as to prevent injury. Our therapists provide hands-on or total assistance for movements until a patient has gained the ability to perform movements independently with or without supervision.
Back to Top
Vibration Therapy
Vibration Therapy is a form of neuromuscular re-education that uses vibration to cause painless very high frequency muscle contractions, thereby enhancing the patient’s ability to efficiently recruit muscle fibers, coordinate movements being performed by joints and muscle tissue and reduce the typical post-injury mechanical dysfunction that typically occurs.
Go to Rehabilitation - Page 1
Request an appointment online or call our office at (845) 764-9089.
Photo Credit, top: Forever Moments Photography