Chronic Pain Treatment
Chronic pain is a persistent condition of pain that lasts more than the usual period taken by any injury to heal, three months, and could be generated by injury, inflammation, nerve dysfunction, or relentless stress on musculoskeletal or neurological systems. Quite opposite to acute pain, which warns the body through the pain response in cases of injury, chronic pain itself is a disease process involving altered neural pathways, enhanced sensitivity to pain, impaired tissue repair, and systemic inflammation.
The complex condition of chronic pain, with its interrelated structural, neurological, metabolic, and emotional components, is seen from a regenerative perspective not as a symptom but rather as a multifaceted problem. Overactive pain circuits, reduced oxygenation, scar tissue formation, hormonal imbalance, and chronic inflammation can all be contributing factors. Regenerative therapies have the goal of restoring balance within such systems, enhancing tissue repair, and retraining pain pathways in support of long-lasting, meaningful relief.