These are the procedures we most commonly use for the hip area. The right one depends on your imaging, history, and what has helped before.
A regenerative injection using concentrated cells and growth factors drawn from your own bone marrow. We typically consider this for advanced joint arthritis or stubborn tendon and cartilage problems when other treatments have not held.
A steroid injection placed directly into a joint to settle arthritis pain or inflammation. Works for shoulders, knees, hips, elbows, wrists, ankles, and the smaller joints of the fingers and toes.
A precise injection of long-acting anti-inflammatory medication into the hip joint. Used for hip arthritis pain that has not settled with physiotherapy and activity modification — typically 4–12 weeks of relief.
A gel-like injection that supplements the natural lubricant in your joint. Often used for knee or hip arthritis when steroid injections have stopped giving you the relief they used to.
An injection that targets a specific nerve outside the spine — for example, the occipital nerve at the base of the skull, or the suprascapular nerve at the shoulder. Calms the nerve that is feeding your pain.
A regenerative injection using a processed form of your own platelets in which the healing growth factors are released up front. We typically consider this for nerve-related and tendon pain where a gentler regenerative option is preferred.
A regenerative injection using the healing factors from your own blood. We typically offer this for chronic tendon problems or arthritis when other injections have lost their effect.
A fluoroscopy-guided steroid injection into the sacroiliac joint. Used for one-sided buttock or low-back pain caused by SI joint dysfunction or sacroiliitis. Both diagnostic and therapeutic in one visit — typically 6–12 weeks of relief.