The burning, the tingling, the numbness medicine calls difficult.
Peripheral neuropathy is real, relentless, and often under-addressed. There's more that can be done than most people have been told, alongside your medical care.
What's happening in the nerves, and what can be worked on.
Nerves can repair more than is often assumed, given the right conditions.
Peripheral neuropathy is damage or dysfunction in the peripheral nerves. It shows up as burning, tingling, electric-shock jolts, numbness, or weakness, most often in the hands and feet. Standard care focuses mostly on quieting symptoms with medication. The biology underneath is what our therapies work on. That means poor microcirculation to the nerves, inflammation in the nerve sheaths, and low energy in the nerve cells. Severe, long-standing damage doesn't fully reverse. But nerves hold more capacity to recover than they're usually given credit for. That's because the conditions they need are rarely supported.
Three biological targets in neuropathy.
Working the mechanisms behind the signal, not just the signal arriving at the brain.
Get circulation back to starving nerves
Peripheral nerves are demanding tissue, and they depend on good microcirculation. When that supply fails, as it does in diabetic neuropathy, the nerves misfire. Contrast therapy improves the tiny-vessel supply to nerve tissue, the circulation side that medication isn't built to reach.
Interrupt the misfiring signal
BioWaveGo sends targeted bioelectrical signals that interfere with the faulty nerve firing behind neuropathic symptoms. Medication sedates the whole nervous system. This works on the signal right where the trouble starts.
Refuel the nerve cells
Nerve cells can repair, but only with the energy to do it. PEMF and red light support the power plants in nerve cells. They supply the cellular energy that chronic neuropathy often runs badly short of.
What can start to shift.
Over steady visits, here's what people tend to notice:
- The constant burning starts to ease in intensity across sessions.
- The distracting tingling quiets as the misfiring is interrupted.
- In some cases, especially early on, a little feeling returns to numb areas as circulation improves.
- Sleep often improves first and most, since neuropathic symptoms reliably worsen at night.
- Steadiness and confidence come back as the feet feel less unsure underfoot.
- Some people, with their prescriber, are able to ease their nerve-pain medication. Any change like that is the doctor's call.
There's another way to see this. Chinese Energetic Medicine reads neuropathy as channels that can no longer reach the edges. The burning is a sign of Empty Heat.
See the Ancient Wisdom view →Always alongside your care, never instead of it.
What we offer here is support for the body, not a replacement for your medical care. If your neuropathy comes from diabetes, blood-sugar management stays essential and stays with your doctor. These therapies work alongside that care, not in place of it. Any medication change is your prescriber's call.
One thing to watch: numbness or weakness that's new, fast-worsening, or climbing up the limbs needs prompt medical attention. That's especially true if it's on both sides, or if it involves the bladder or bowel. And if you have diabetes, numb feet can hide cuts and infections. Keep up regular foot checks with your care team.
What's here that can help.
Each is a self-directed therapy you can use on a day pass or membership. Staff will help you find a good place to start.
- BioWaveGoTargeted bioelectrical signals that interrupt the faulty nerve firing behind neuropathic pain, without sedating the whole system.
- PEMFGentle pulsed energy that supports nerve-cell energy and eases nerve-sheath inflammation, the conditions nerves need to recover.
- Full-Spectrum Red LightSupports cellular energy and eases the inflammation that can feed nerve trouble.
- Russian Muscle StimulationHelps the motor side of neuropathy, keeping muscle working where nerve weakness has set in.
- Contrast TherapyWarm-cool cycling that improves the peripheral microcirculation driving diabetic and circulation-related neuropathy.
- GroundingHelps settle the body-wide inflammation that can feed nerve conditions.
Questions people ask.
I have diabetic neuropathy. Can these help?
Diabetic neuropathy is driven largely by poor circulation to the nerves. Contrast therapy works on that circulation directly, and PEMF works on the nerve damage itself. Blood-sugar management stays essential and stays with your doctor.
I've had it for years. Any point?
Duration matters but doesn't decide the outcome. Long-standing neuropathy responds more slowly. But even after years, nerves often retain more capacity to respond than the history suggests.
Can these be used with my nerve-pain medication?
Yes. They work on the biology medication doesn't target, the circulation, the inflammation, the nerve-cell energy, alongside your prescriptions. Any change to medication is your prescriber's call.
Classes and events for neuropathy.
Nothing on the calendar right now. New classes and events are added often, so check back soon.
Nerves are capable of more repair than is often assumed.
Support the conditions nerves need: circulation, energy, less inflammation. There's often more to be done than you've been told. A good place to start is here, alongside your care.