| Years 1–2 (Pre-Treatment) | Managed Achilles pain with compression sleeves, NSAIDs, and activity modification for years. Reduced coaching intensity and avoided demonstrating drills. Accepted pain as part of the job until it began limiting daily walking. |
| ▸ Treatment at City Integrative Rehabilitation | |
| Condition | Bilateral midportion Achilles tendinopathy |
| Duration | 3+ years |
| Occupation | High school track coach |
| Prior Treatment | Compression sleeves, NSAIDs, activity modification |
| Impact | Unable to demonstrate drills for athletes |
The Presenting Complaint
A 42-year-old high school track coach came to us with a frustration we hear often: bilateral Achilles tendinopathy that had persisted for over three years. For the past few years, he’d been “managing” his pain rather than treating it. Compression sleeves, NSAIDs, and careful modification of his activity had become his daily routine. But the deeper cost was professional—he could no longer demonstrate running mechanics and drills for his athletes the way his coaching required.
He accepted the pain as a permanent fixture of his life and had adapted his coaching to work around it. When he arrived at our clinic, his expectations were modest: perhaps he could reduce the pain enough to demonstrate occasionally. What he didn’t realize was that chronic Achilles tendinopathy is not something you manage indefinitely—it’s something you resolve.
Treatment Approach
Bilateral Focused Shockwave Therapy (F-ESWT)
We treated both Achilles tendons with focused shockwave therapy. Because the condition was bilateral and chronic, we used a comprehensive protocol: six sessions per side, spaced appropriately to allow healing between treatments. This stimulated the tissue at a cellular level to rebuild the tendon structure rather than merely suppress inflammation.
Dynamic Neuromuscular Stabilization (DNS)
We introduced DNS protocols focused on ankle stability and calf activation patterns. His years of modification had likely compromised his proprioceptive control and calf activation strategies. DNS retrained his nervous system to properly recruit and stabilize the calf and Achilles complex.
Gait and Movement Optimization
We assessed his walking and running mechanics to identify any patterns that were perpetuating the overload on his Achilles. Small adjustments to cadence, stride length, and foot positioning can make a significant difference in bilateral conditions.
Phase 1 Weeks 1–4 | F-ESWT (3 sessions per side), DNS ankle mobilization and proprioception, gait assessment, pain management and activity modification as needed |
Phase 2 Weeks 5–7 | F-ESWT (3 remaining sessions per side), progression to single-leg calf strengthening, walking drills with corrected mechanics, continued DNS integration |
Phase 3 Weeks 8–10 | Return to coaching duties including demonstration of drills, jogging capacity, maintenance DNS work, prevention strategy |
Recovery Timeline
| Week 7 | Able to jog at conversational pace; demonstrating full running mechanics to athletes; compression sleeves no longer required |
| Week 10 | Complete resolution of bilateral Achilles pain; coaching without restrictions; jogging 2–3 times per week for fitness |
The Outcome
After 10 weeks, this coach returned to full professional capability—demonstrating drills, running with his athletes, and coaching without pain for the first time in over three years. Six months later, his Achilles remains pain-free and he has maintained a jogging routine for fitness. The key was recognizing that chronic tendinopathy requires active healing intervention, not indefinite management.
Disclaimer: This case study represents one patient’s experience and is provided for educational purposes only. Results vary based on individual factors, condition severity, and adherence to treatment. This is not a guarantee of outcomes. Always consult with a qualified healthcare provider before starting any treatment program.
Related: F-ESWT | DNS | Anatomy in Motion

