If you have been in pain for more than six months and have already tried physical therapy, chiropractic, injections, or surgery without lasting relief, you are not out of options. You have run into the limits of a system that is not built to find what is actually wrong.
Most chronic pain patients we see in Charlotte have already done everything they were supposed to do. They followed the referrals. They did the home exercises. They took the medications. They went under anesthesia when they were told to. And the pain still came back, or never fully left in the first place.
There is a reason this happens, and it has nothing to do with you not trying hard enough. It has to do with what almost no provider is trained to look for.
Why Standard Care Misses Chronic Pain
Most musculoskeletal care is built around imaging. The visit starts with a scan. Findings on the scan get matched to known diagnoses. Treatment follows from those findings. This works well for acute injuries and obvious structural problems.
It fails almost completely for the most common driver of chronic pain: adhesion.
Adhesion is dense, fibrous scar tissue that forms inside muscles, around nerves, and between joint structures when soft tissue is overloaded, injured, or held in restricted positions for long periods. It limits how tissue moves. It traps nerves. It forces the rest of the body to compensate. None of it shows on imaging. A patient with significant adhesion can have an MRI that reads as normal. Here is exactly why a normal MRI does not mean nothing is wrong.
This is the gap. Imaging cannot see adhesion. Most providers are not trained to feel for it. So when a patient walks in with chronic pain and a clean scan, the system runs out of answers.
Why Each Type of Provider Tends to Miss It
Most of our patients have seen three or more providers before they find us. Each one was working within their scope and doing what they were trained to do. The problem is that the scope itself does not include identifying and removing adhesion directly.
Physical therapists
PTs are trained to restore movement and build strength. When adhesion is present, strengthening exercises load tissue that is already restricted. You feel better during PT because load is being managed. When PT ends, load returns to a system that never actually changed. The pain comes back.
Chiropractors
Chiropractic adjustments restore joint motion. They can produce real, fast relief. But adjustments do not change the soft tissue around the joint. If a nerve is entrapped in scar tissue along the sciatic pathway or in the scalenes of the neck, no spinal manipulation will release it. The joint moves better, but the nerve is still stuck.
Massage therapists
Massage moves fluid and reduces tone. It feels good. It helps for a few days. But standard massage technique does not generate the specific, sustained pressure across an exact tissue boundary that adhesion requires to break down. The relief fades because the underlying restriction never changed.
Pain management and orthopedics
Pain management providers are looking for pharmaceutical or interventional indications. Orthopedic surgeons are looking for surgical ones. Adhesion is neither. A scan that does not show surgical pathology sends the patient back to conservative care with no new direction. Many patients in this position end up cycling for years.
Surgery
When surgery is the right answer, it is the right answer. The problem is that surgery cannot remove the adhesion that develops both before and after the procedure. Many patients have a successful operation in the structural sense and still have pain because the soft tissue system around the surgical site was never addressed.
What Actually Has to Happen
To break the cycle, the underlying mechanical problem has to change. That means three things:
First, an accurate diagnosis of which tissue is overloaded and why. Not a scan. A detailed history that maps how your symptoms behave with movement, position, time of day, and load.
Second, a hands-on exam that confirms or rules out adhesion in the tissues your symptoms point to. This is feel-driven work. It cannot be done from across a room or with a machine.
Third, treatment that targets the adhesion directly, with an immediate retest after every treatment so you can feel and see the change. Not exercises. Not stretches. Not generic soft tissue work. Adhesion release with measurable confirmation.
How We Approach This at Resolve STS
We use a six-step system called Adhesion Release Methods (ARM). Every visit follows the same sequence:
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History to identify which tissue is most likely overloaded
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Movement testing and palpation to confirm where the restriction lives
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Direct, hands-on adhesion release on the specific tissue
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Immediate retest of the same movement to verify the tissue changed
That last step is the one that separates this from almost everything else you have tried. After every treatment, we retest the exact movement we treated. You see the change before you leave the room. Either the test improved or it did not. There is no guessing.
Our average patient is seen for 12 to 16 visits over three to four months. Most see meaningful change in the first two to three visits — because the test improves before the pain fully resolves, and that improvement is your earliest signal that the underlying problem is finally moving.
What We Treat
Most patients who find us are dealing with one or more of the following: chronic low back pain, sciatica and nerve entrapment, neck pain, shoulder pain, knee pain, foot and ankle pain, or elbow pain that has not responded to standard care. The pattern is almost always the same: the pain has been present for months, multiple providers have been seen, and nothing has held.
If your primary problem is back pain specifically — and you have already cycled through PT, injections, or surgery — our deeper breakdown of why chronic back pain keeps coming back is here. If your pain is disc-related and keeps returning despite treatment, we have a separate post on why disc pain recurs and what changes things.
Who We See in Charlotte
Our patients in Charlotte are typically 40 to 65, active or trying to stay active, and have seen at least three providers without lasting relief. Many have had injections. Some have had surgery. A growing number have done extensive conservative care and are skeptical at this point that anything new will help.
That skepticism is fair. We do not ask you to believe the approach will work. We ask you to come in for a consultation, let us take a full history, and let us tell you honestly whether what we do is the right fit for what is going on. If it is not, we will tell you that. If it is, we will tell you that too, and we will show you measurable change in the room before you commit to a treatment plan.
What a First Visit Looks Like
The first step is a 30-minute consultation. We sit down, take your full history, and talk through what has and has not worked. If we believe adhesion is part of your case, we schedule a one-hour exam and treatment visit. That visit is where we do the movement testing, confirm the diagnosis, treat the most relevant tissue, and retest.
By the end of that first treatment visit, you will know two things: whether your tissue responds to adhesion release, and what a realistic treatment timeline looks like. No surprises, no open-ended care plans.
Common Questions
Why has nothing worked so far?
Almost always because adhesion has not been treated directly. It does not show on imaging. Most providers are not trained to feel for it. Treatments that manage symptoms — adjustments, injections, generic massage, exercise — can produce short-term relief without changing the underlying restriction. When the relief fades, the problem returns.
My MRI was normal. Could something still be wrong?
Yes. Adhesion does not appear on MRI. Many of our patients have completely normal scans and significant soft tissue restriction driving their symptoms. Here is a full breakdown of why a normal MRI does not rule out a real mechanical problem.
How is this different from what I have already tried?
Two things. The diagnostic process is built around feeling for adhesion directly, not interpreting a scan. And every treatment is followed by an immediate retest of the same movement we treated, so the change is measurable in the room. You see the result before you leave.
How long until I know if it is working?
Usually two to three visits. The movement test improves before the pain fully resolves. That early test improvement is the leading indicator. If we are not seeing test changes by visit three on the highest-priority structure, we tell you, and we either change direction or honestly assess whether you are a fit for this work.
Do you take insurance?
We do not take insurance. The reason is straightforward: insurance dictates which codes get reimbursed and how much time per visit. Neither of those constraints lets us deliver the kind of care chronic pain actually requires. Patients pay directly for results, not for coded time slots, and most are willing to do that after years of trying treatments their insurance covered without success.
How much does it cost and how long does treatment take?
We will give you specific numbers in your consultation based on what we find. The average patient is seen for 12 to 16 visits over three to four months. Most patients move into a maintenance schedule once the primary issue resolves so the adhesion does not rebuild.
Ready to Find Out What Has Been Missed
If your pain has lasted six months or longer, if you have seen multiple providers without lasting relief, and if you are tired of being told everything looks fine while you still cannot do what you used to do, a consultation is the right next step. Schedule a consultation with us at Resolve STS in SouthPark Charlotte.
We will take a full history, tell you honestly whether we think adhesion is part of your picture, and explain exactly what we would do about it if you decide to move forward.
Zac Breedlove
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