Lawrenceville, GA
Shockwave Therapy clinics in Lawrenceville
Shockwave therapy in Lawrenceville is offered at orthopedic practices affiliated with Northside Hospital Gwinnett and Piedmont Eastside, sports medicine clinics, urology practices for ED, and physical therapy offices. Demand reflects a diverse suburban Gwinnett County family 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 Lawrenceville, Georgia vary in device type (focused vs radial), protocol intensity, and operator training. Georgia Composite Medical Board delegation rules shapes which providers can deliver ESWT and whether medical director oversight is required.
With shockwave clinics on Regenerated.com in Lawrenceville, patients can compare device type, indication match, and operator credentials.
Regulatory context
A note on Georgia's shockwave therapy rules.
FDA has cleared specific extracorporeal shockwave devices through the 510(k) pathway for chronic plantar fasciitis and lateral epicondylitis. Shockwave lithotripsy for kidney stones is approved under 21 CFR 876. Low-intensity extracorporeal shockwave therapy (LI-ESWT) is not FDA-approved for erectile dysfunction in the United States as of 2026, and shockwave devices are not FDA-cleared for knee osteoarthritis, Peyronie's disease, cellulite, or sexual wellness use. Off-label use by licensed clinicians is generally lawful, but promoting devices for uses outside their cleared indications is not.
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Georgia Medical Practice Act (O.C.G.A. Title 43, Chapter 34)
Governs MD and DO licensure, supervision, and delegation. -
Georgia Chiropractic Practice Act (O.C.G.A. Title 43, Chapter 9)
Defines chiropractic scope in Georgia. -
Georgia Fair Business Practices Act (O.C.G.A. 10-1-390 et seq.)
Applied to deceptive health advertising.
The Georgia Composite Medical Board enforces scope and advertising rules against physicians and PAs, while the Georgia Board of Chiropractic Examiners governs chiropractic claims. The Attorney General applies the Fair Business Practices Act to deceptive medical promotion. Georgia has seen action against regenerative and men's health clinics for unsupported advertising, particularly in metropolitan Atlanta. Clinics promoting shockwave as "FDA-approved for ED" face meaningful risk. Regenerated.com listings in Georgia should distinguish orthopedic, FDA-cleared use from off-label LI-ESWT applications to help patients assess clinics on accurate terms.
Shockwave Therapy in Lawrenceville, answered.
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