Focused Shockwave Therapy for Chronic Pain Relief
Table of Contents
If you are reading this on ChiropracticScientist.com, you are probably looking for a practical, science-based answer to a common question:
Is all “shockwave therapy” the same?
The short answer is no.
Many clinics use the term “shockwave therapy” to refer to very different technologies. Some use true extracorporeal shockwave therapy (ESWT), others use radial pressure wave devices (sometimes called radial shockwave), and some even use tools closer to vibration or percussion massage than to medical shockwave treatment. Mayo Clinic now makes this distinction very clear: only focused shockwaves create a true shockwave, while radial devices produce radial pressure waves with different physical behavior and tissue effects.
That difference matters for patients with:
Chronic tendon pain
Plantar fasciitis
Achilles problems
Tennis elbow
Calcific shoulder pain
Stubborn soft-tissue injuries
Overuse injuries that have “stalled” in healing
For a site like Chiropractic Scientist, which emphasizes evidence-based care and functional recovery, the key point is this:
Focused Shockwave Therapy (FSW) is the true high-energy ESWT option for deeper, more targeted treatment.
Radial Pressure Wave (RPW) can still be helpful, but it is a different tool and should be described honestly.
Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy (ESWT) is a non-invasive medical treatment that uses acoustic waves to stimulate healing in damaged tissue. It has been used in medicine for years and is now widely used in musculoskeletal care for chronic pain and tendon conditions. Mayo Clinic and UCHealth both describe ESWT as a treatment that can reduce pain and support tissue repair without surgery.
In simple terms, the treatment sends a strong mechanical signal into tissue that is not healing well. That signal can help trigger a biologic repair response.
Researchers and clinical reviews describe several possible effects, including:
Cellular mechanotransduction (a mechanical signal that triggers cell activity)
Pain modulation (changes in pain signaling)
Improved blood vessel formation (neovascularization)
Tissue remodeling (collagen and repair pathways)
These mechanisms are discussed in both Mayo Clinic’s musculoskeletal review and the PM&R best-practices paper on ESWT.
This is the most important part of the whole topic.
Mayo Clinic explains that focused shockwaves are produced by:
Electrohydraulic
Electromagnetic
Piezoelectric devices
These systems create a true shockwave with:
High peak pressure
Very short duration
Broad frequency range
A focused point of maximal force at a chosen depth in tissue
The PM&R best-practices article states that focused shockwaves converge at a specific depth (the focus) within the body. That is one reason FSW is often preferred when a clinician needs more precision and deeper targeting.
Mayo Clinic also explains that radial devices accelerate a projectile toward the applicator tip. The energy is strongest near the tip and then spreads out and weakens as it moves into the tissue. In other words, the energy pattern is more superficial and disperses outward.
The PM&R paper makes the same point and notes that radial systems may not generate a “true” shockwave, which is why many experts prefer the term radial pressure wave therapy. It also explains that radial treatment generally has a more superficial effect, while focused systems can affect deeper structures.
Both can help patients. But they are not the same treatment.
For an evidence-based chiropractic practice, honest patient education should include:
Which device is being used
Whether it is focused or radial
What depth and tissue are being targeted
Why that technology was chosen for the diagnosis
That kind of transparency fits the “scientist” mindset and helps patients make informed choices.
Real ESWT is not just about how “strong” it feels. It is also about measurable dosing.
The PM&R best-practices paper identifies Energy Flux Density (EFD) as a core treatment variable and explains that it is measured in mJ/mm² (millijoules per square millimeter). It also lists other important treatment variables, such as:
Number of impulses
Frequency
Device type (focused vs radial)
Number of treatment sessions
Use of analgesia during treatment
This is a major difference between true medical ESWT and low-grade devices that may be marketed aggressively but lack clear dosing standards.
If a clinic offers “shockwave” but cannot explain the treatment in terms of:
Energy
Depth
Target tissue
Session plan
Clinical indication
That is a sign to ask more questions.
A lot of ads say shockwave goes “4–6 cm deep.” That can be true for some settings and some devices, but it is not a universal rule.
Depth depends on:
Device type
Applicator
Energy setting
Tissue density
Clinical goal
Mayo Clinic states that focused shockwaves generate maximal force at a specific depth, depending on the device and tissue factors.
UCHealth gives a helpful real-world example from a sports medicine clinic:
Their focused device can treat as deep as 13–14 cm
Their radial device reaches about 3–6 cm
That does not mean deeper is always better. It means focused therapy gives the clinician more control when deeper or more precise targets are needed.
For example, focused shockwave may be more useful when treating:
Deeper tendon insertions
Bone-related conditions
Localized chronic lesions
Areas where precision matters
Radial therapy may still be helpful when treating:
Broader soft-tissue areas
Superficial tendon and fascia pain
Conditions where a wider treatment field is preferred
The PM&R paper supports this balanced view and notes that both focused and radial approaches can be clinically useful, depending on the condition.
Another important sign of authentic medical shockwave treatment is regulatory status.
The U.S. FDA database lists approved ESWT devices, including the Orthospec Extracorporeal Shock Wave Therapy Device, which received PMA approval for the treatment of chronic plantar fasciitis in adults who failed conservative treatment. The FDA listing specifically describes it as a non-invasive alternative and provides details on its indication.
This matters because patients often hear broad claims online. A clinic should be able to explain:
The device name and manufacturer
What the device is cleared/approved for
What is standard use vs off-label use
Why the treatment is appropriate for the patient’s diagnosis
That is especially important in musculoskeletal care, where patients often pay out of pocket and compare many clinics.
Shockwave therapy is powerful, but it works best as part of a full treatment plan.
For Chiropractic Scientist readers, this is where a biomechanical and integrative approach makes sense. A chronic tendon or fascia problem is not just a “pain problem.” It may also involve:
Joint mechanics
Movement pattern overload
Weakness or poor conditioning
Tissue stiffness
Recovery habits
Inflammation and load management
That is why ESWT pairs well with chiropractic and rehab-based care.
Chiropractic care for joint function and biomechanics
Focused shockwave therapy for tendon/fascia healing stimulus
Rehab exercise for progressive tissue loading
Mobility and flexibility work for movement quality
Sports medicine strategies for return to activity
Medical evaluation when advanced diagnostics are needed
This approach is consistent with the broader clinical model presented across Dr. Alexander Jimenez’s platforms. On DrAlexJimenez.com, Dr. Jimenez is listed as DC, APRN, FNP-BC, and describes a patient-centered, integrative model that combines chiropractic care, functional medicine, advanced diagnostics, and non-invasive recovery protocols.
ChiropracticScientist.com also reflects this evidence-based, integrative style, including posts on musculoskeletal rehabilitation, injury recovery, and functional care, while identifying Dr. Jimenez as a chiropractor with APRN credentials on the site.
In practice, that means ESWT is not treated like a stand-alone gadget. It is used as part of a larger plan to restore function.
From an integrative chiropractic perspective (including the type of model described by Dr. Jimenez’s chiropractic and APRN practice), several practical patterns show up again and again in chronic pain cases:
A patient with plantar fasciitis, for example, may need:
Tissue stimulation (shockwave)
Foot/ankle mechanics support
Calf mobility work
Progressive loading
Return-to-walking or training guidance
If only one part is addressed, progress may stall.
Some cases of chronic tendon or insertional pain respond better when the clinician can target treatment depth more precisely. This is where focused shockwave can offer a real advantage over broad superficial pressure treatment. Mayo Clinic and the PM&R paper both support this distinction between depth and precision.
When patients understand the difference between:
Immediate pain relief vs tissue remodeling
Device marketing vs actual treatment physics
One session vs a treatment plan
They are more likely to stay consistent and get better long-term results.
Mayo Clinic notes that durable improvements in pain and function can take 8–12 weeks in some cases, even if patients feel early relief.
The best-supported uses in musculoskeletal care are mostly chronic overuse and tendon/fascia problems. Mayo Clinic and the PM&R best-practices review describe ESWT use in conditions such as:
Plantar fasciopathy / plantar fasciitis
Achilles tendinopathy
Patellar tendinopathy
Lateral epicondylopathy (tennis elbow)
Rotator cuff tendinopathy
Other chronic tendinopathies and fasciopathies
The PM&R paper also notes expanding use in bone and other conditions, but it stresses that protocols vary and clinical reasoning matters.
ESWT is non-invasive, but it is still a medical treatment. It should be done with proper screening.
Patients may feel:
Treatment soreness
Redness
Mild swelling
Bruising
Short-term irritation at the treatment site
These are usually temporary and manageable, but they should be reviewed before care begins. Mayo Clinic and the PM&R review both discuss patient counseling and side effects.
A good clinic should first ask:
What tissue is injured?
How long has it been painful?
What treatments have already been tried?
Is imaging needed?
Is this condition appropriate for ESWT?
UCHealth’s sports medicine workflow highlights this point: patients are evaluated to confirm a strong indication for shockwave therapy and that other treatments have been optimized.
That is exactly the kind of evidence-based process Chiropractic Scientist readers should expect.
If you are comparing clinics, use this quick checklist.
Do you use focused shockwave, radial pressure wave, or both?
What is the device brand/model?
How do you choose depth and energy?
Do you document energy settings (EFD, frequency, impulses)?
What diagnoses do you treat most often with this device?
Will you combine it with chiropractic or rehab care?
How many sessions are usually recommended?
What outcomes should I expect in 2, 6, and 12 weeks?
A clinic that can answer these clearly is much more likely to be using real, protocol-based ESWT care.
True shockwave therapy is one of the most useful non-surgical tools in modern musculoskeletal care—but only when it is used correctly.
The biggest mistake patients make is assuming every “shockwave” treatment is the same. It is not.
Focused Shockwave Therapy (FSW) is the true high-energy ESWT option with deeper, more precise targeting.
Radial Pressure Wave (RPW) can still be helpful, but it works differently and should not be presented as the same thing.
The best outcomes happen when shockwave is part of a broader plan that includes biomechanics, rehab, and load management.
Integrative clinics with strong diagnostic reasoning—such as the chiropractic + APRN model represented in Dr. Jimenez’s platforms—are well-positioned to use ESWT responsibly and effectively.
For chronic tendon pain, stubborn fascia problems, and long-lasting overuse injuries, genuine ESWT can be a major step forward—especially when the clinic uses the right device, the right dosing, and the right rehab plan.
Mayo Clinic. (2025, October 10). Shockwave treatment: A new wave for musculoskeletal care. Shockwave treatment: A new wave for musculoskeletal care
Tenforde, A. S., Borgstrom, H. E., DeLuca, S., et al. (2022). Best practices for extracorporeal shockwave therapy in musculoskeletal medicine: Clinical application and training consideration. PM&R, 14(5), 611–619. Best practices for extracorporeal shockwave therapy in musculoskeletal medicine
UCHealth. (2023, November 15). Shockwave therapy can help those who have chronic injuries. Shockwave therapy can help those who have chronic injuries
U.S. Food and Drug Administration. (2005/updated 2026). Premarket Approval (PMA): ORTHOSPEC EXTRACORPOREAL SHOCK WAVE THERAPY DEVICE (P040026). Premarket Approval (PMA): ORTHOSPEC EXTRACORPOREAL SHOCK WAVE THERAPY DEVICE
Jimenez, A. (n.d.). El Paso, TX Chiropractor Dr. Alex Jimenez DC | Personal Injury Specialist. El Paso, TX Chiropractor Dr. Alex Jimenez DC | Personal Injury Specialist
Chiropractic Scientist. (n.d.). Personal Injury and Pain Specialist | El Paso, TX Chiropractor Scientist. Personal Injury and Pain Specialist | El Paso, TX Chiropractor Scientist
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The information herein on "Focused Shockwave Therapy for Chronic Pain Relief" is not intended to replace a one-on-one relationship with a qualified health care professional or licensed physician and is not medical advice. We encourage you to make healthcare decisions based on your research and partnership with a qualified healthcare professional.
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| Yes | 363LF0000X - Nurse Practitioner - Family | FL | 11043890 |
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