Pure Phoenix
- PRP Therapy
- Shockwave Therapy
- Arthritis Treatment
- Red Light Therapy
- Erectile Dysfunction (ED) Treatment
Scottsdale, AZ
Shockwave therapy in Scottsdale is offered at orthopedic practices affiliated with HonorHealth Scottsdale, Mayo Clinic Scottsdale, and Banner MD Anderson, sports medicine clinics, urology practices for ED, and physical therapy offices. Demand reflects an affluent, longevity-focused, medical-tourism-heavy population.
Evidence is strongest for focused and radial extracorporeal shockwave therapy (ESWT) in plantar fasciitis, Achilles tendinopathy, tennis elbow, and calcific shoulder tendinopathy, and is emerging for ED. FDA clearance exists for several device classes. Clinics in Scottsdale, Arizona vary in device type (focused vs radial), protocol intensity, and operator training. Arizona's permissive stem cell and regenerative medicine climate shapes which providers can deliver ESWT and whether medical director oversight is required.
With shockwave clinics on Regenerated.com in Scottsdale, patients can compare device type, indication match, and operator credentials.
Regulatory context
FDA has cleared specific extracorporeal shockwave devices through the 510(k) pathway for narrow orthopedic indications, primarily chronic plantar fasciitis and lateral epicondylitis. Shockwave lithotripsy for kidney stones is FDA-approved under 21 CFR 876. Low-intensity extracorporeal shockwave therapy (LI-ESWT) for erectile dysfunction has not received FDA approval or clearance for that indication as of 2026. Shockwave use for knee osteoarthritis, cellulite, Peyronie's disease, and ED is considered off-label. Clinics may lawfully use cleared devices off-label, but marketing claims for those uses are constrained by FTC and state consumer-protection rules.
The Arizona Medical Board and the Arizona Attorney General's consumer protection division have both acted against clinics making unsupported efficacy claims, particularly in the men's health and ED space. Clinics advertising shockwave for ED are expected to disclose the off-label status and avoid unqualified "cure" or "FDA-approved for ED" language. Arizona's Consumer Fraud Act (A.R.S. 44-1521 et seq.) has been used to pursue deceptive health advertising. Regenerated.com listings in Arizona should reflect whether a clinic clearly differentiates cleared indications from off-label use.