Bellevue, NE
Shockwave Therapy clinics in Bellevue
Bellevue has multiple clinics advertising shockwave therapy, spanning orthopedic, podiatric, men's health, and aesthetic applications. Washington shockwave clinics skew toward sports medicine and orthopedics, with a smaller men's health segment in Seattle and Bellevue. Bellevue 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 Bellevue 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 Bellevue clinic frames this evidence honestly and matches provider specialty to the indication.
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A note on Nebraska's shockwave therapy rules.
FDA 510(k) clearances exist for specific extracorporeal shockwave devices indicated for chronic plantar fasciitis and lateral epicondylitis. Kidney stone shockwave lithotripsy is approved under 21 CFR 876. 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 indications. Off-label clinical use is permitted, but marketing that implies FDA approval for those uses is not and is subject to FDA, FTC, and state enforcement.
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Nebraska Uniform Credentialing Act (Neb. Rev. Stat. 38-101 et seq.)
Governs licensure and scope for medicine, chiropractic, PT, and allied professions. -
Nebraska Consumer Protection Act (Neb. Rev. Stat. 59-1601 et seq.)
Applied to deceptive health advertising.
The Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, through its Division of Public Health, administers licensure boards. The Attorney General applies the Consumer Protection Act to misleading health advertising. Nebraska has pursued clinics for unsupported claims in regenerative medicine and related areas. Shockwave clinics advertising ED treatment as FDA-approved face meaningful exposure. Enforcement is complaint-driven. Regenerated.com listings in Nebraska should reflect supervising provider credentials and separate cleared orthopedic uses from off-label applications.
Shockwave Therapy in Bellevue, answered.
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