Solutions For Your Physical Health

“Your body is your most priceless possession, take care of it.”
— Unknown.
Advanced Biostructural Correction (ABC)
This technique has emerged as a relatively new way to improve structure and function of the human body. It is a full body approach, which involves adjusting only the joints in the body in a direction that the body cannot self correct them.
This technique is particularly good at improving poor posture. Some of the aspects of poor posture include, rounded shoulders, hunched forward, protruding abdomen, nerve pain, sciatica symptoms, unlevelled shoulders or pelvis.
Low Force Techniques
We understand that one size does not fit all and so Dr Jordan is trained in a wide range of techniques and will cater his care to your specific needs.
Some of these techniques include:
Activator
Sacral Occipital Technique (SOT)
Inclusive of Pelvic Blocking
Drop Piece (Thompson Technique)
Soft tissue therapy (instrument assisted and manual)
Rehabilitation Exercises
Dry Needling
During a dry needling treatment, one or more thin, monofilament needles are inserted into a muscle trigger point. A trigger point is a local band of tight, irritable and dysfunctional muscle tissue. This often emerges because of injury, overuse or poor movement patterns.
When dry needling is applied to an affected muscle or trigger point, it can decrease muscle tightness, increase blood flow and reduce pain. Patients often report immediate relief after treatment. The needles remain in your muscle for a short period of time — between 10 seconds and 20 minutes — during treatment. This depends on the treatment location, number of needles used and treatment goals.
Dry needling usually is paired with exercise and other physical therapy techniques to prevent trigger points from reoccurring.
The needles used are solid and don’t inject liquid into your body. It's the reason this treatment is referred to as "dry." All forms of acupuncture use dry needles as well.