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Clinics in Denver, North Carolina

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Denver, NC

Shockwave Therapy clinics in Denver

Denver has multiple clinics advertising shockwave therapy, spanning orthopedic, podiatric, men's health, and aesthetic applications. Colorado is a strong shockwave market, particularly along the Denver metro Front Range, with heavy sports medicine and men's health positioning. Denver providers typically run focused shockwave for FDA cleared orthopedic indications like plantar fasciitis, lateral epicondylitis tennis elbow, and chronic tendinopathy, and radial or low intensity shockwave (LI-ESWT, often branded as GAINSWave) off label for erectile dysfunction in 6 session protocols. Kidney stone lithotripsy is a separate FDA cleared category usually performed in hospital settings. Local pricing in Denver sits in the standard range, with a standard 6 session ED protocol commonly quoted at 2,500 to 6,000 dollars, while single session orthopedic shockwave runs 250 to 500. Device matters: verify the clinic uses an FDA cleared unit like Storz, Chattanooga, or BTL rather than a low end imported device. Evidence for orthopedic shockwave is Strong for plantar fasciitis and tennis elbow, while LI-ESWT for ED remains Emerging, with several randomized trials showing benefit but inconsistent protocols. A reputable Denver clinic frames this evidence honestly and matches provider specialty to the indication.

2 Clinics

ReliefNow Laser Centers

Denver, NC

ReliefNow Laser Centers, located in Darlington, specializes in Class IV laser therapy for musculoskeletal pain, inflammation, and tissue repair. The clinic offers low-level laser therapy (LLLT) as a …

  • Shockwave Therapy
  • Laser Therapy (LLLT)
  • Arthritis Treatment
  • TMJ Treatment

Little Mountain Chiropractic & Wellness

Denver, NC

Little Mountain Chiropractic & Wellness, located in Rock Hill, offers corrective chiropractic care alongside Laser Therapy (LLLT) and Shockwave Therapy for musculoskeletal and soft-tissue conditions.…

  • Shockwave Therapy
  • Laser Therapy (LLLT)
  • Arthritis Treatment
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Regulatory context

A note on North Carolina's shockwave therapy rules.

FDA 510(k) clearances exist for specific extracorporeal shockwave devices indicated for chronic plantar fasciitis and lateral epicondylitis. Shockwave lithotripsy for kidney stones is approved under 21 CFR 876. LI-ESWT is not FDA-approved for erectile dysfunction in the United States as of 2026, and no shockwave device is FDA-cleared for knee osteoarthritis, Peyronie's disease, cellulite, or sexual wellness indications. Off-label use by licensed practitioners is permitted, but marketing implying FDA approval for those uses is not and creates regulatory exposure.

  • North Carolina Medical Practice Act (N.C. Gen. Stat. Chapter 90, Article 1)
    Governs MD and DO licensure and delegation.
  • North Carolina Chiropractic Practice Act (N.C. Gen. Stat. Chapter 90, Article 8)
    Defines chiropractic scope in North Carolina.
  • North Carolina Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Act (N.C. Gen. Stat. 75-1.1)
    Applied to deceptive health advertising; treble damages available.

The North Carolina Medical Board, North Carolina Board of Chiropractic Examiners, and North Carolina Board of Physical Therapy Examiners oversee professional conduct. The Attorney General applies the Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Act to misleading health advertising, with treble damages available. North Carolina has pursued regenerative medicine clinics for unsupported claims, and shockwave clinics advertising ED treatment as FDA-approved face similar exposure. Enforcement is active in the Charlotte and Raleigh-Durham markets. Regenerated.com listings in North Carolina should accurately reflect FDA clearance and distinguish cleared indications from off-label use.

Shockwave Therapy in Denver, answered.

In Denver, a standard 6 session low intensity shockwave (LI-ESWT) protocol for erectile dysfunction typically runs 2,500 to 6,000 dollars, with premium clinics on the higher end and more affordable providers on the lower end. Single session orthopedic shockwave for plantar fasciitis or tendinopathy usually runs 250 to 500 dollars per session, with most protocols requiring 3 to 6 sessions. Aesthetic shockwave for cellulite or body contouring ranges 200 to 400 per session. Confirm whether pricing includes consultation and follow up.

Partially. The FDA has 510(k) clearance for extracorporeal shockwave therapy for plantar fasciitis, lateral epicondylitis tennis elbow, and kidney stone lithotripsy. Low intensity extracorporeal shockwave therapy (LI-ESWT) for erectile dysfunction is not FDA approved and is used off label in Denver clinics. Aesthetic applications like cellulite are also off label. The FDA cleared orthopedic devices and the off label ED devices are often the same hardware, but the evidence base and regulatory status differ.

Shockwave in Denver is delivered by MDs and DOs across urology, men's health, sports medicine, and physical medicine and rehabilitation; podiatrists (DPMs) for foot and ankle indications; and chiropractors where state scope of practice allows. Colorado scope rules determine whether chiropractors and mid level providers can independently administer shockwave. Verify the provider's specialty match to your condition: orthopedic shockwave from a DPM or sports medicine MD, ED shockwave from a urologist or men's health trained MD.

FDA cleared indications include plantar fasciitis, lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow), and kidney stone lithotripsy. Off label uses in Denver clinics include erectile dysfunction (LI-ESWT or GAINSWave), Peyronie's disease, chronic pelvic pain, Achilles tendinopathy, patellar tendinopathy, rotator cuff tendinopathy, trochanteric bursitis, and aesthetic cellulite reduction. Evidence is Strong for plantar fasciitis and tennis elbow, Emerging for ED and tendinopathy, and Limited for aesthetic applications. Ask the clinic for the evidence basis of any proposed use.

Verify the provider on the Colorado medical or podiatry board license lookup and the NPI registry. Confirm the device is FDA cleared (Storz, Chattanooga, BTL, Dornier, EMS) rather than a generic low cost unit. Match specialty to indication: DPM for plantar fasciitis, sports medicine MD for tendinopathy, urologist or men's health MD for ED. Ask for the evidence basis of your proposed treatment and expect honest framing, especially for off label LI-ESWT. Be cautious of clinics pushing large prepaid packages or guaranteed outcomes.

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