Your Primary Care Doctor
Everyone should have a family doctor, pediatrician, or internist. We always send a report to your primary physician.Patients scheduled for joint replacement or other major surgery are scheduled to see their internist before the operation. Managed care may require that certain tests be scheduled through your family physician.
How We Treat
- Examine and diagnose bone and joint problems
- Take X-rays and promptly interpret the films
- Provide medication injections and crutches
- Apply splints, casts, and slings
- Provide reports to family physicians and insurance companies
- Perform surgery when indicated
- Provide permission to engage in or refrain from: work, gym, sports, military service, health club participation, vacations, airplane trips, and the use of handicap parking placards
- Arrange for additional tests (arthrograms, MRI of the spine, MRI scans, bone scans, CT scans, blood tests, synovial fluid analysis)
- Take X-rays, Dexa scan, MRI and ultrasound
What We Treat
- All Ages (Pediatric to Geriatric)
- Sports Injuries
- Work Injuries
- Arthritis
- Foot and Ankle Problems
- Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Fractures and Dislocations
- Emergency Problems
- Walk-In Treatment of Orthopedic Injuries
Who We Treat
INFANTS & CHILDREN
- Foot and leg deformities
- Pediatric Orthopedics
- School injuries
- Fractures and sprains
- Cerebral palsy
- Gait problems
- Sports Injuries
HIGH SCHOOL & COLLEGE AGES
- Sports injuries
- Torn ligaments
- Knee arthroscopy
- Automobile injuries
- Shoulder and knee pain
ADULTS
- Tendonitis
- Shoulder and elbow pain
- Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Work and sports injuries
- Back pain
- Hand and foot problems
- Sports Injuries
- Joint Replacement
- Fractures
50+
- Joint replacement
- Hip and knee pain
- Arthritis care
- Bunions and hammer toes
- Tendon damage
- Sports Injuries
- Fractures

