Shockwave therapy for stubborn heel and tendon pain.
Shockwave therapy may help persistent soft-tissue and tendon pain when symptoms are not settling with rest alone.
At Flow Clinic in Wairau Valley, Auckland, shockwave therapy is used as part of a structured rehab plan for selected heel pain, plantar fasciitis, Achilles pain and tendon irritation cases.
Shockwave therapy is commonly used for persistent tendon and heel pain.
It may be considered when symptoms are persistent, localised and suitable for shockwave based on clinical assessment.
Plantar fasciitis
Shockwave may be used for persistent heel pain when plantar fascia irritation is not settling with load management and exercise alone.
Achilles pain
Shockwave may support Achilles tendon rehab when combined with progressive calf loading and footwear advice.
Tendon irritation
Selected tendon pain presentations may benefit from shockwave when used with a structured strengthening programme.
Shockwave is not a stand-alone magic fix.
Persistent heel and tendon pain usually involves tissue capacity, load tolerance and movement habits. Shockwave therapy may help reduce pain sensitivity and support tissue response, but long-term recovery usually needs progressive loading.
That is why Flow Clinic combines shockwave therapy with education, footwear advice, activity modification, strengthening and return-to-activity planning.
- Assessment before treatment
- Used only when clinically appropriate
- Combined with rehab exercises
- Useful for selected persistent heel and tendon pain
- Progress reviewed based on symptoms and function
How shockwave therapy works at Flow Clinic.
A structured process to make sure treatment fits your symptoms, condition and recovery goals.
Assess the pain
We assess pain location, irritability, duration, loading pattern, footwear, calf strength and functional limits before recommending shockwave.
Confirm suitability
Shockwave is not suitable for every condition. We check whether your presentation is appropriate and explain expected response.
Apply treatment
Shockwave is applied to the target tissue area with dosage adjusted based on tolerance, symptoms and clinical reasoning.
Progress rehab
Treatment is paired with strengthening, load management and return-to-activity progression to support longer-term recovery.
Conditions commonly considered for shockwave therapy.
The final recommendation depends on assessment findings, symptom behaviour and whether shockwave is clinically appropriate.
Plantar fasciitis
Persistent heel pain under the foot, often worse with first steps, prolonged standing or increased walking load.
Achilles tendinopathy
Persistent Achilles tendon pain that may be aggravated by running, stairs, jumping or calf loading.
Patellar tendon pain
Selected anterior knee tendon pain presentations may need load management, strengthening and clinical assessment.
Gluteal tendon pain
Selected lateral hip tendon pain presentations may be considered depending on assessment and irritability.
Shin pain
Some lower-leg overload presentations may need careful assessment, load reduction, strengthening and footwear review.
Chronic soft-tissue irritation
Longer-lasting localised soft-tissue pain may be considered when the presentation matches shockwave indications.
Simple add-on pricing.
Shockwave therapy is available as a $50 add-on per session when clinically appropriate. It is usually combined with assessment, rehab exercises, load management and footwear advice.
Questions about shockwave therapy.
Simple answers before booking shockwave therapy at Flow Clinic.
Is shockwave therapy painful?
It can feel uncomfortable during treatment, especially over sensitive tissue. The intensity can usually be adjusted based on tolerance.
How many sessions do I need?
This depends on your condition, duration of symptoms and response to treatment. The number of sessions should be decided after assessment.
Can shockwave replace rehab exercises?
No. Shockwave should usually support a rehab plan. Strengthening and load management are still important for long-term recovery.
Is shockwave suitable for all heel pain?
No. Heel pain can come from different structures. Assessment is needed to confirm whether shockwave is appropriate.
Can I get shockwave with ACC treatment?
Shockwave may be used as an add-on when clinically appropriate. Eligibility and appointment costs depend on your claim and treatment plan.
Persistent heel or tendon pain?
Book an assessment at Flow Clinic in Wairau Valley. We will check whether shockwave therapy is appropriate and combine it with a clear rehab plan.