All treatments
Thoughtful treatment options before surgery is the next conversation.
Dr. Jones focuses on non-operative care, coordinated primary care, and treatment planning that supports both recovery and long-term health.
Preventive health, wellness planning, medical concerns, and continuity of care.
Diagnosis and next-step planning for acute injuries, recurring pain, and activity limitations.
Conservative care strategies for joint, tendon, muscle, and overuse conditions.
Support and protection for select sprains, fractures, joint injuries, and recovery plans when immobilization or stability is needed.
Focused imaging support for musculoskeletal assessment when clinically appropriate.
Precision-guided sports medicine procedures based on the patient’s diagnosis and goals.
PRP therapy uses a concentrated dose of your own platelets to support healing in select tendon and joint conditions.
A minimally invasive, ultrasound-guided option for chronic tendon pain that has not improved with conservative care.
Activity modification, return-to-play guidance, and coordination with therapy when needed.
Practical recommendations for training, conditioning, recovery, and injury prevention.
Splinting, casting, and bracing
Dr. Jones performs splinting, casting, and bracing when an injury needs protection, support, or temporary immobilization as part of a non-operative recovery plan.
These options may be used for select sprains, strains, fractures, tendon or ligament injuries, and joint problems depending on the diagnosis and the patient’s activity goals.
When these supports help
A splint, cast, or brace may help reduce stress on injured tissue, support healing, improve comfort, and provide structure while patients transition back to normal activity.
Dr. Jones can also guide when protection should be reduced, when therapy or exercise should begin, and when additional imaging or specialty care is appropriate.
Platelet-Rich Plasma
PRP therapy: harnessing your body’s natural healing power.
If you are struggling with a chronic tendon injury or joint arthritis that is not responding to standard treatments, Platelet-Rich Plasma therapy offers a minimally invasive option to support healing and reduce pain.
PRP therapy uses a concentrated dose of your own blood platelets to target inflammation and help restart the repair of damaged tissue from the inside out.
Procedure images or stills from Angela’s footage can be placed here.
What is Platelet-Rich Plasma?
Your blood is primarily made of plasma, but it also contains red cells, white cells, and platelets. While platelets are best known for clotting blood, they also contain specialized proteins called growth factors that are critical to the body’s natural healing process.
To create PRP, a sample of your blood is drawn in the clinic and placed in a centrifuge, which spins at high speeds to separate the platelets from other blood cells. This creates a concentrated solution with a higher platelet count and more healing growth factors than normal blood.
How PRP treats tendon and joint issues
Tendons and joint cartilage have a relatively limited blood supply compared with other tissues. When they are injured or wear down over time, that limited blood flow can make it difficult for the body to repair them fully.
By precisely injecting concentrated PRP into the site of pain or tissue damage, the goal is to deliver healing factors where your body needs them most.
Conditions commonly treated with PRP.
Percutaneous tenotomy
A minimally invasive solution for chronic tendon pain.
If you suffer from chronic tendon pain, commonly known as tendinitis or tendinosis, that has not improved with physical therapy or rest, percutaneous tenotomy may be an option.
This advanced, minimally invasive procedure is designed to treat the source of tendon pain without traditional open surgery or a lengthy recovery period.
Ultrasound or procedure stills can be added here when available.
What is percutaneous tenotomy?
Over time, chronic overuse can cause healthy tendon tissue to break down, leading to scarred, degenerative tissue called tendinosis. Unlike a fresh injury, this damaged tissue often has poor blood flow and may fail to heal on its own.
Percutaneous tenotomy uses a specialized needle-like device inserted through a tiny incision under ultrasound guidance to precisely target and remove damaged tissue.
How it supports healing
By clearing away the debris of a chronic injury, the procedure is intended to help the body restart the natural healing process and rebuild healthier, more functional tendon fibers.
It is commonly considered for overuse injuries where the tendon has become thickened, painful, or scarred despite conservative care.